Cudos wrote:I am still having some really bad moments with the heavy, thick, muggy sensation in the mask which seems to add to the exhale "and" inhale.
Are you using a heated hose? If so, turn it off. Are you using a heated humidifier? If so, turn it down or turn it off.
Not everyone's nose likes or wants a heated hose. Not everyone's nose likes or wants the extra humidification from a heated humidifier.
Also, if you are running the hose under the covers next to your body, you might want to run the hose on top of the covers or hang it overhead.
I am going to get our A/C installed to control room temp and then play with the heated hose and humidity settings which I don't currently have control over. yes, I know I can change them but I had made a promise to my RTT that I would not mess with them.
Heated hose and humidifier settings are NOT therapeutic settings. They are
comfort settings. And you should have full access to them. And you need to change them to make yourself more comfortable. If the RTT says otherwise, then I think you need to tell the RTT that s/he is not the one sleeping with the machine---you are. And you are feeling like you are sleeping in a swamp with the settings the RTT is saying you must use.
Don't let the RTT bully you into believing that s/he knows more about what will make you most comfortable in your own bed when you are trying to get to sleep while using the machine.
That is going to change after today when i see her and tell her I will go with the dreamstation (i think) , seems to have a easier flow rate if that makes sense, and that I will be proactive in my own settings and such.
Yep. Makes sense to me. I never could tolerate the S9 AutoSet that I had the first 3 months of PAPing.
Cudos wrote:"I am not a Bipap candidate"
I was just told after inquiring about a Bipap over Cpap do to my ongoing trouble trying to breath "exhale" on the CPAP/AUTO settings.
WHO told you this? The RTT or a sleep doc? Remember, the RTT is NOT the one who is authorized to make the decision about whether you do or do not qualify for BiPAP.
I was told again that Bipap was for COPD and heart patients. I was told that Bipap does not treat the airway but the lung (increasing pressure's) in the lung for those who can't breath well on their own. Dismissed it completely. They said the next stop for those on Bipap was intubation. They also said I would need approval from a pulmonary specialist for use of a Bipap and that I was NOT a candidate because I did not suffer from any serious respiratory disease.
This is (politely speaking) poppycock.
I am on BiPAP and I do NOT have COPD or heart disease. I can breath just fine on my own (except when my upper airway collapses due to OSA). I do not suffere from any serious respiratory disease.
But I could not get restful, relaxing sleep when I was on CPAP/APAP due to aerophagia and not being able to exhale comfortably. And after 2 months of trying desperately to get some decent sleep, it was my sleep doc's PA who said she and the sleep doc had discussed my case and the only idea they could come up with was for me to try bilevel. I was floored when the PA made that suggestion since it had not occurred to me at all that BiPAP might be more comfortable for me than CPAP/APAP was.
My RRT visit yesterday has me now off any treatment for a few weeks to "settle" down and get back to normal. They feel I'm just over anxious which is what is causing my suffocating feeling in the mask.
Pardon my saying it, but this makes no sense at all. The RRT should NOT be the one making medical decisions about whether you should or should not be taken off of PAP. That's a decision that should be left to a qualified sleep doctor.
Also, quite frankly, unless the RRT does something different in terms of setting up the machine or in terms of changing you from CPAP/APAP to bilevel, there's no good reason to believe that trying PAP in "a few weeks" is going to be any easier for you: The exact issues that you have been dealing with are still going to be there AND you're going to have the whole "It didn't work last time" stuff to work through psychologically before your brain will make peace with the machine.
The last report of me is on the 'auto" setting 5-10. They said I was at a full 10 all night indicating i was wanting more pressure. But increasing pressure increases my exhale suffocation which 'apparently " is all in my g.dam head!!
Given the OA index and the HI on your previous reports, that is indeed evidence that you need more than 10cm to control your OSA. The fact that you cannot handle more pressure than that with the exhalation problem, indicates that you may indeed do better on bilevel. By the way, many sleep labs will routinely switch a titration patient to bilevel if the pressure gets to 15cm even without any history of COPD, heart disease, or other history of respiratory illness. It's known that a lot of people have trouble tolerating (high) pressure and the drop from IPAP to EPAP makes higher pressure much easier for many people to tolerate bilevel. It is ridiculous that you keep being told that bilevel is only for people with COPD or heart disease.
They said the data showed me as mess, getting little useful rest and fighting the treatment, hence the hiatus their sending me on . They still believe I am a better candidate for straight pressure, although I struggled on both I did manage to fall asleep at points on the "auto" despite the ugly readings.
"They" don't seem to understand that you need more than 10cm of pressure even if you are using straight pressure and that you can't seem to tolerate that much pressure even with exhalation relief turned on.
So I guess when I return (if) I return I will go back to straight pressure, assuming I have found my inner Chi and have leaned how to let things go before bedtime. I felt as If I was at the psychiatrists office at not a sleep clinic.
It sounds like the people at the sleep clinic are in full
Blame the Patient for NOT Getting Better mode.
My guess is that the only way you are going to get these idiots to understand that what they are telling you to do is NOT WORKING is to hit them over the head with the fact that things are NOT WORKING.
My advice:
1) The next time you start PAP or if you choose to keep PAPing, keep your PAP machine in airport mode
all the time. This will prevent the sleep clinic from changing the settings without your knowledge. If they call you telling you something is wrong, play the innocent. Just remember that every time they change your settings, you are a guinea pig in their experiment. If you can't or won't do that, then you are going to have to call and complain
every single time they monkey with your settings and things get worse.
2) Find a hose temp/humidifier setting combination that minimizes or eliminates the sleeping in a swamp feeling. If the sleep clinic folks change the settings back to something that triggers the swamp feeling, call them the next morning and tell them you cannot tolerate a heated hose set higher than
x-degrees or a heated humidifier set higher than the
y setting and you noticed the settings had been altered by them yet again and want a note put in your file that says they are NOT authorized to make changes to your setting without your prior approval.
3) Find the most comfortable EPR/Flex setting for you. In other words find the EPR/Flex setting that makes exhaling most comfortable and breathing most normal feeling. If the sleep clinic folks change the EPR/Fless settings something that makes it more difficult to exhale or makes your breathing feel weird, call them the next morning and tell them you are most comfortable when EPR/Flex is set to
x and you noticed the EPR/Flex setting had been altered by them yet again and want a note put in your file that says they are NOT authorized to make changes to your setting without your prior approval.
4) Keep a sleep log that contains when you went to bed, when you got up, how restless you were during the night, and a note about how (un)comfortable you felt if you had problems sleeping. Also make a note of how (un)rested you feel when you get up in the morning. If night time wakes are an issue, the easiest way I know to document that you are waking up a lot more than you should is to turn the machine off and back on every time you wake up enough to know that you are awake.
Its all in my head!!
Your current problems are NOT all in your head. Don't let them convince you that they're all in your head. You went into this with a positive attitude---your attitude was much more positive than mine was when I started 5.5 years ago. But you've hit some pretty serious snags and it sounds like the idiots who are supposed to be treating you have decided that those snags are "not real". That's not fair to you and if you have a choice in the matter, you might very well want to consider finding a different sleep doc/sleep clinic that is more flexible when it comes to dealing with new PAPers who are faced with serious problems in tolerating PAP therapy.