split_city wrote:I am getting a little confused with what you are saying and the graph Bill put up. Is EPAP pressure lower during early expiration and then rises towards the end of expiration? I see a downwards deflection followed by a rise towards the EPAP line.
The graph Bill put up was describing how a
comfort feature called "Bi-Flex" works. Bi-Flex is a trademark name for a comfort feature included only in Respironics bi-level machines.
You are absolutely right, split -- after bi-flex does its "comfort thing" (dropping pressure a tad more at the beginning of the lower EPAP) bi-flex allows the regular EPAP to come back in BEFORE exhalation is finished...that rise towards the EPAP line you mentioned. Same way that C-flex in a Respironics cpap machine allows the regular cpap pressure to come back in BEFORE exhalation is finished.
A plain bi-level machine that does not have bi-flex would simply switch from IPAP to the "regular" EPAP,
without giving that
extra bit of drop at the beginning of EPAP.
If EPAP is set (as it should be) during a bilevel PSG titration in a sleep lab, EPAP will be set at enough pressure to keep the airway from collapsing completely with an obstructive apnea.
As I understand it, that's ALL that EPAP really has to do...
prevent full obstructive apneas from happening.
If EPAP does THAT -- prevents full collapse of the airway -- then the person can START to inhale again. Starting to inhale triggers IPAP (higher pressure) to make the airway patent (open) for breathing in.
"Bi-Flex" (which doesn't mean "bi-level") is simply a feature Respironics uses to
smooth the transitions between the two bi-level pressures (IPAP and EPAP.)
Bi-flex can be used at three degrees of "smoothing", or can be turned off.
A traditional bi-level setting for a rise time (time it takes for the machine to move up to delivering the FULL IPAP pressure when a person starts to breathe in again) can be used instead of the bi-flex feature.
One
or the other (bi-flex or a rise time) can be used in a Respironics bi-level machine and in the BiPAP Auto (not talking about the BiPAP Auto SV.) Can't use both (bi-flex
and a rise time) at the same time. It's either/or. Or, both can be turned off, in which case the BiPAP would operate like a plain bi-level machine using its default "rise time."
As far as what "Bi-Flex" does at the BEGINNING of EPAP (when a person STARTS to exhale) that icing on the cake extra bit of drop Bi-Flex gives to the start of exhaling is exactly like what C-flex does. Both Bi-Flex and C-Flex let the "regular" pressure come back in before exhalation is completely finished. That way the pressure needed to keep the airway open to allow an inhalation to get started is ALREADY in place.
The "regular" pressure needed to allow a person to START to inhale again is:
In a CPAP machine - the prescribed cpap pressure.
In a Bi-level machine - an EPAP set high enough to prevent obstructive apneas from the get go. That is not necessarily as high a pressure as the pressure that results from a CPAP titration.
The CPAP titration has to find a pressure which will prevent
more than just obstructive apneas. The CPAP pressure needs to prevent partial closures too. The single CPAP pressure has to prevent everything from the partial collapses to the full collapse.
A bi-level (like the BiPAP) machine's EPAP has to be effective ONLY in preventing full obstructive apneas during and after exhalation. Events (flow limitations, hypopneas, and residual snores) that need MORE pressure than what it takes to prevent full collapse (obstructive apnea) are then handled by the higher IPAP.
I think of EPAP (the lower pressure) as keeping the airway "open enough" to ALLOW a person to START to draw in the next breath.
I think of IPAP (the higher pressure) as then taking care of keeping the airway "completely open" -- preventing all the partial closures, so that a person can inhale fully.