Abstract Introduction Each year, 3 million older people are treated in emergency departments for fall-related injuries. These falls can lead to serious injuries and expensive health care costs. Some have looked into the relationship between chronic sleep disturbances and falls linking chronic sleep deprivation or excessive sleep to falling. Here, we present a unique case of chronic sleep deprivation causing sleep attacks or micro-sleeps with atonia causing falls. Report of case(s) We present a 75-year-old F with a history of increased daily falls up to 4x per day that began 3 years ago. She denies any triggering events, auras, frequent tripping, loss of balance or weakness. Reportedly, she will be walking along then suddenly falls. She is aware that she is falling yet feels as though she cannot prevent/stop the fall or break her fall. No one has witnessed her fall, but is frequently found lying on the floor. She has never sustained a serious injury as a result of her falls. She has an 8 year history of restless legs syndrome treated with ropinirole and a 10 year history of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) treated with CPAP. Her general bedtime is 2200 and wake-time is 0400 with an average 3–4 hrs of quality sleep per night for many years. She endorses severe daytime hypersomnolence and chronic hypoxemia on 3L home oxygen. We hypothesized her falls were secondary to sleep attacks or micro-sleeps where she enters REM sleep and develops atonia. Nocturnal sleep study followed by MSLT showed severe OSA with severe, persistent daytime sleeping with REM sleep and atonia. She had a mean sleep latency of 2 minutes with 1 sleep-onset REM period. We started NIPPV with supplemental oxygen treatment, and within 4 months her daytime hypersomnolence resolved, exercise intolerance improved, saturations improved to 89–90% on room air, and has <1 fall per day. Conclusion Here, we presented a unique case of a 75 yo F with recurrent falls secondary to chronic sleep deprivation causing micro-sleeps involving REM sleep and atonia. She was treated with NIPPV which improved her oxygenation and reduced her number of falls to <1 per day. Support (if any):