
Rather than tediously scrolling through hours of flow rate data, maybe it's now possible to teach a machine to analyze data and flag RERAs? I am sure I am not the first one with such an idea.
Mask: Mirage Quattro™ Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Humidifier: S9™ Series H5i™ Heated Humidifier with Climate Control |
Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ P30i Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear Starter Pack |
Additional Comments: Min EPAP: 8.2, Max IPAP: 25, PS:4 |
Since you stopped breathing, it's an apnea. But it doesn't *count* because it wasn't at least 10 seconds.
Mask: AirFit™ P10 For Her Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Additional Comments: Airsense 10 Autoset for Her |
Maybe, question is whether the increased flow, after a short pause, is an indication of sleep-disordered breathing, or is it something to be ignored, or it's still arousal but not breath-related, but I guess it's impossible to tell without EEG.
Mask: Mirage Quattro™ Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Humidifier: S9™ Series H5i™ Heated Humidifier with Climate Control |
Mask: Quattro™ FX Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Additional Comments: myAir, OSCAR. cms-50D+. airsense 10 auto & (2009) remstar plus m series backups |
Interesting. RERA's were a major component of my SDB, and I ignored then for quite a while. If they meant anything, they'd show up on the machine's sleep report, I thought. Then I watched the sleep disordered breathing video that palerider posts pretty frequently and it prompted me to take a look.Dog Slobber wrote: ↑Mon Dec 30, 2019 3:56 pmThe Resmed Airsense 10 AutoSet and AutoSet for Her, (perhaps other models) do *attempt* to flag RERAs.
I never found the RERA flagging to be accurate, reliable or beneficial. I've since moved on to an AirCurve, and don't miss not having the RERA flagging.
Machine: ResMed AirSense™ 10 AutoSet™ CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: Bleep DreamPort CPAP Mask Solution |
Additional Comments: Backup machine: AirSense 10 AutoSet with all the fixins |
What I see there is increasing flow limitation (the chair shapes on the inhalations) then an arousal, recovery breaths, possibly some moving around, and more recovery breaths.djams wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2020 1:55 pmInteresting. RERA's were a major component of my SDB, and I ignored then for quite a while. If they meant anything, they'd show up on the machine's sleep report, I thought. Then I watched the sleep disordered breathing video that palerider posts pretty frequently and it prompted me to take a look.Dog Slobber wrote: ↑Mon Dec 30, 2019 3:56 pmThe Resmed Airsense 10 AutoSet and AutoSet for Her, (perhaps other models) do *attempt* to flag RERAs.
I never found the RERA flagging to be accurate, reliable or beneficial. I've since moved on to an AirCurve, and don't miss not having the RERA flagging.
Here is an example of what I'd see regularly while getting my settings tweaked. Three minutes of struggling to breathe, with a big arousal at the end. Looks very much like a hypopnea. I speculate that it didn't meet the criteria for flow reduction. But not sure. I'd have 10-20 of these a night. As you point out, not all of them would look as legit as this one. But OA's+H's+RERA's is what made me accept the advice here to keep raising min pressure.
So I wouldn't tell folks to ignore RERA's, were very real in my case.
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I don't believe Dog Slobber was saying that you should ignore RERA's, just that you should take the Autoset flagged RERA events with a grain of salt and that you need to review your data to see if what is flagged as a RERA is actually a RERA (like in your case).
Thank you, captain oblivious.