"Nothing" and "No". C-Flex and EPR do not work exactly the same. The "Flex" technologies from Respironics sense the exhale process and give a slight drop in pressure at the beginning of the exhale......relative to the person's exhale effort. It also keeps a little back pressure to help prevent apneas from occurring and increases pressure as the inhale process begins again. The C-Flex setting does not correlate to a fixed pressure number like EPR does in the ResMed machines.SleepingUgly wrote:What does this mean with Cflex + ? For example, I have CPAP set to 8.0 and I have Cflex + set to 3. Does this mean the pressure is 5 when I start to inhale, or is that how it is with Cflex, but not Cflex +?Wulfman wrote:With an EPR setting of "2", you're getting two less centimeters of pressure on exhale. So, if you're at the minimum pressure of 7.4, after you exhale, you're "effective" pressure is down to 5.4 when you start your inhale cycle. Snores occur when inhaling.
With EPR, the pressure drop in centimeters corresponds to the EPR setting and drops that amount of pressure for the full exhale effort.
I haven't actually studied or read up on the "C-Flex +" technology, yet. But, I have been using C-Flex for nearly 5 years in my own machines.
Den