This is to ask whether I should buy an Oxygen sensor or a CO2 sensor to detect which room in my house is the best for my sleep, or to analyze the issue into something else.
There was a question here with a very good answer https://answers.yahoo.com/question/inde ... 828AA2J31F, and I wonder how Sleep Apnea people here experience between an O2 sensor vs a CO2 sensor ?
- Background:
I've been using CPAP for almost 3 months, with 100% compliant, yet still have a foggy brain.
Symptoms: foggy brain, brain with low processing speed, feeling of something is grabbing around my head especially the back part after my two years.
Good room: 13m2, windows half opened and room door opened, CPAP machine lies at an altitude 30cm higher than my head, at a spacious area. Bed size is 180 cm x 200 cm
Bad room: 8m2, windows half opened, room door opened, CPAP machine has two options: either (1) at a spacious area but 40cm higher than my head or (2) in a narrow and less ventilated area but only 15 cm higher. than my head. Bed size is 90cm x 200 cm.
Both options in the bad room cause stronger negative symptoms to my head than the good room. Talking about grades: my pre CPAP morning foggieness was 10 / 10, with bad room: 7 / 10, with good room 5 / 10 (lower is better). With both rooms I sleep on my back.