Technically, that is correct. However, because of the slight increase in pressure, the total amount of air corrected to non-cpap pressure is just a little bit more.wardmiller wrote:Help me understand where my logic goes astray.
Without CPAP I usually inhale about X cu.ft. of the ambient air each cycle. I breath about Y times per minute. The ambient air's humidity is what it is.
When I put on the CPAP the additional pressure in my airways is established almost instantly ("almost", I said). Thereafter, the amount of air entering my body each breathing cycle is about that X cu.ft. and has the same humidity as without CPAP because it is the same ambient air. My rate is about the same, so, for a given period of time, about the same amount of moisture enters my body via the air I'm breathing, with CPAP or without.
For the most part that is correct.wardmiller wrote:Some may argue the CPAP is forcing more air into my body. I say it is merely increasing the *pressure* within my airways, not the *quantity*. I'm not taking deeper breaths, I'm not inhaling more frequently. It is the same *quantity* of ambient air, with the same "quantity" of moisture, CPAP or not. The excess air supplied by CPAP is vented out of the mask, before it enters my body.
I've never heard anyone complain about the ambient air he's breathing has too low humidity. Why would he complain the CPAP-supplied air has lower humidity when it is the same air and same quantity of air?
To the extent that the breathing is oral breathing, the humidity in room air may not be nearly enough. The nasal passages provide extra humidification for the air passing through that the mouth cavity does not. So, mouth breathers need more humidity that nasal breathers. Some FFM users and all Oral Mask users fall into this category.wardmiller wrote:I know some CPAP users sincerely state it dries out their air passages and creates considerable discomfort unless they really crank up the humidity. From a physiological standpoint, why?
I can breathe through my nose when awake and upright but I cannot while sleeping and lying down. Depending on the angle in a recliner chair its iffy.