It has been a long time since I've had satisfactory sleep. I've used CPAP for at least 12 years, but the last few years have been the most problematic. I'm not rested and occasionally wake with headaches, the usual signs of poor quality sleep. I switched to Kaiser about three years ago. They issued me a PR S1 APAP. My AHI was consistently above 5 and sometimes above 10. Kaiser sent me for a couple of sleep studies and then switched me to a PR S1 BiPAP. Things didn't really improve. The respiratory therapist (I've yet to see a physician at Kaiser about my sleep issues) basically threw up her hands and told me that my sleep apnea is severe and that I should accept an AHI of 10. At the time, my average AHI was 9.3 and the average amount of time in periodic breathing was 12.2% (per the Respironics software used by Kaiser). That was about two years ago.
Yesterday I went back to Kaiser for a data download. I was not given the Respironics printout so I cannot make an apples to apples comparison, but I do now have Sleepyhead. The data is as bad or worse. This time, the therapist seemed concerned and believed that the AHI should be below 5 (of course) and she was concerned about the high percentage of time in periodic breathing. She has referred me for a further sleep study.
Per Sleepyhead, here are my averages for the past 30 days:
AHI: 9.56
CSR: 5.63% (I am aware that Sleepyhead records all PB as CSR, whether it is or not.)
These averages are a bit misleading because some nights have low numbers, such as CSR=0. About half the nights have a CSR over 7.5% and a couple of nights in the last month have a CSR in the neighborhood of 11%. I thought it might be useful to include some waveforms. The first is from an episode lasting 5:43 and the second is from an episode lasting 3:08.


I'm hoping that the further sleep study will help diagnose the issue. However, I am concerned that a single study may not prove helpful. First, not every night sees high percentages of PB, so a single night of data may not be representative. Second, the triggers may be in my environment so sleeping in a medical lab is not really representative. (Although I see the same phenomenon while at a hotel on a business trip.)
In any event, if the community here has anything to offer in terms of knowledge or suggestions in dealing with Kaiser, I would be grateful.
Marc