KittyMom22 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 01, 2022 8:37 pm
I'm concerned that if I should need to stay over with a friend, or want to go camping, or maybe even possibly have sex one day, or if the power goes out, I won't be able to sleep at all without the machine, as someone else just posted.
APAPs are highly portable: If your friend lives in the same town, driving to pick it up is not that difficult.
Many of us regularly camp
with our xPAPs: They can run on battery power. Heck there are even some people who have found ways to do backpacking trips into the backcountry with small sized travel units and solar powered batteries. Is it cheap? No. But it beats being crabby and short tempered and tired on the whole trip because your sleep is disrupted by lots of apneas.
As for sex? A lot of us are married and our sex lives have not deteriorated. And any potential mate who can't stand the idea that you need to put your mask on after finishing sex and wanting to sleep doesn't really care about what is in your best interests.
As for power outages? Well, yeah, they can be difficult. If your power only goes out for a short while, staying up is an option. But in a prolonged outage? Yeah, that means either putting up with a whole lot of not very good sleep OR being prepared with a battery pack and a way of charging the battery pack. So if you live in areas that are prone to lots of power outages, particularly long ones, it's worth preparing for one.
It's one thing to use glasses - it's not an electrical aid and I have multiple pairs as well as contacts.
It's just really hard to give up all spontaneity and independence.
Yeah, it seems like you have to give up all spontaneity and independence. But its not really like that at all. Unless you are asleep, you are not tied to a machine. And you are owned by two high needs cats, so you already have to do a lot of planning to do something spontaneous---in other words you already have to plan on who's going to take care of those kitties and how long can you safely leave them before you've got to get back to them.
Edited: I know you're all feeling very sage about this but it's new to me and I deserve to be able to process and grieve. I am struggling to accept this permanent disability.
It's ok to grieve. And we've all been through that.
But it's not ok to think of needing a CPAP as a "permanent disability." Having OSA and needing CPAP is much more like having high blood pressure and needing to take BP meds. Or being a diabetic and needing to use an insulin pump. OSA is a chronic health condition and CPAP is the treatment for that chronic health condition. When you use CPAP, your OSA is treated and you become healthy because the OSA is controlled and no longer destroying your body.
I am a person who requires mechanical assistance to breathe.
NO. You do NOT need mechanical assistance to breathe---if you needed mechanical assistance to breathe, you would be on an actual ventilator.
Rather---your upper airway needs a bit of support---in the form of some very gentle pressure to keep it open. You are doing all your own breathing for yourself when you are using your CPAP. You are initiating the inhalations and you are initiating the exhalations. Your muscles are doing all the work of breathing all night long.
All CPAP does is prop your airway open so that your brain can get some sleep instead of having to be constantly vigilant of the need to arouse just enough to unobstruct a collapsed airway over and over and over all night long. Once you learn how to sleep
well with the CPAP, CPAP allows your body to once again enjoy
normal sleep that is uninterrupted by constant sleep disordered breathing events.
Yes, in the early days it seems as though CPAP is just as bad, if not worse than, the disease. But that's not unique to OSA: Many other chronic medical conditions have treatments that have side effects that cause problems with people complying with the therapy. Many diabetics have real trouble adjusting to the diet they need in order to help control their diabetes along with dealing with the insulin injections. Many people with high blood pressure find it difficult to cut back on salt and many BP medications have side effects. Many people with debilitating migraines spend years trying to find a drug regime that they can tolerate in terms of side affect that will also control their migraines.
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