New and confused

General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
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Julie
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Re: New and confused

Post by Julie » Sat May 16, 2015 4:37 pm

Sleeping 'events' usually don't awaken people... they're called 'arousals', and we're not aware of most, let alone remember them, not unless they're very intense and disruptive, so don't expect to remember them as such (apart from the odd time).

Kerriboberri
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Re: New and confused

Post by Kerriboberri » Sat May 16, 2015 4:57 pm

I'm just so afraid that since I don't actually have apnea that a Cpap won't help and I'll never get relief. I've been compaining to my Dr. for years but I've been blown off. I've recently gotten a new Dr. That agreed to the sleep study.

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palerider
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Re: New and confused

Post by palerider » Sat May 16, 2015 5:01 pm

Julie wrote:Why do her results say apnea within normal levels?
even low ahi with a high rdi and snoring could benefit from a cpap... at least, her bedmate might like the quiet

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kaiasgram
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Re: New and confused

Post by kaiasgram » Sat May 16, 2015 5:13 pm

Kerriboberri wrote:I'm just so afraid that since I don't actually have apnea that a Cpap won't help and I'll never get relief. I've been compaining to my Dr. for years but I've been blown off. I've recently gotten a new Dr. That agreed to the sleep study.
I like your new doctor.

It has only been fairly recently that your type of sleep-disordered breathing is recognized as a serious condition warranting treatment. Then there has been the additional barrier of insurance refusing to cover treatment because the AHI is not high enough -- even when the RDI is up in the severe range. Just a year or two ago one of my colleagues had clinically documented Upper Airway Resistance Syndrome (her sleep study looked like yours) and her neurologist was fighting with her insurance to get her a CPAP machine, to no avail.

So take heart -- your doc is on the ball and it sounds like your treament is being covered. And yes, CPAP can help! The pressure from a PAP machine can keep the airway more open and allow you to breathe more easily. Fewer arousals, less snoring (maybe even none), better sleep, relief from symptoms, better life!

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NachtWürger
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Re: New and confused

Post by NachtWürger » Sat May 16, 2015 5:26 pm

kaiasgram wrote:So take heart -- your doc is on the ball and it sounds like your treament is being covered. And yes, CPAP can help! The pressure from a PAP machine can keep the airway more open and allow you to breathe more easily. Fewer arousals, less snoring (maybe even none), better sleep, relief from symptoms, better life!
Yes to all! A new life.

Kerriboberri
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Re: New and confused

Post by Kerriboberri » Tue May 19, 2015 7:03 pm

Thank you! I somehow missed these last posts? It helps!