-SWS wrote:Doug, how did you sleep with that AHI of 0.3? And how did you feel the next day?
Does SV still feel significantly better for you compared to this auto BiLevel model that Respironics targets for obstructive SDB?
Steve,
I was fine for most of the night - woke a few times (battling a chest cold) & was actually thinking that maybe I could stay with this
machine awhile (as mentioned earlier weight hit 80KG yesterday & am now heading to 78 as the final target). ###2 I was also aware
on the occasions I woke, that I was nose breathing & doing ok (took both Nasonex & Otrivin sprays before bed to make sure). Just
to restate, for most of the night thought it was progressing well & working well despite me setting epapMin to 8. ###
But, then I hit the last 3 hours & started to detect things that I take as negative experiences.
- started to feel 'heavy headed'
- got cramps (strong ones)
- woke up with a familiar 'dizzy' feeling (not alert & raring to go like I normally am)
- am at work & not feeling the same zest as after using the Bipap Auto SV - no great difference but very noticeable.
I then though nup, don't want to risk the great extended results I have been getting from the Bipap Auto SV (& the Vpap Adapt SV).
Right at the moment the Bipap Auto SV is delivering outstanding nights with mostly 0 AI & next to no HI (as shown in an earlier link).
I do attribute the success I have been having to that extra PS the Bipap Auto SV delivers. I am sure that many of us here have
been through that cycle where therapy is good & we are able to better control our exercise & eating vs battling a sluggishness
that seems to overtake us when it isn't working.
In comparing the Vpap SV to the Bipap SV, both seem to deliver consistently good results but I do get cramps when using the
Vpap SV but almost never when using the Bipap SV. I believe my sleep is deeper using the Bipap SV than the Vpap SV but the
days are good with both, at times the Vpap SV days seemed a bit better but no so much that I would be worried.
The cramps are also there when I use cpap my Vantage travel machine & as with last night, the Bipap Auto (biflex).
In balance & despite the big weight reduction (97KG to 80 KG in the past 6 months or so), I believe I need to stay
on cpap therapy & am very sure that the SV therapy is what makes the difference. If I really believed I could have
stayed with the Bipap Auto (biflex) for a few nights I would. It is a verrry quiet machine (wife commented about
how quiet it was compared to the Bipap SV).
I am still intrigued at the relationship to dizziness on waking, getting leg cramps, why this seems to vary between
machines (am still thinking it is CO2 related).
DSM
#2
Here is a link to the prior 4 nights using the Bipap Auto SV, the last 3 of the 4 nights are even better than the data
from the Bipap Auto (biflex) but, you can see that the SV algorithm was working quite actively all night.
Something
in these SV machines makes a big difference. I would like to be able to articulate what it might be but don't have
that level of expertise. If I could take a stab at what it might be, it would be that the Servo Ventilation becomes highly
effective in the 3 or so hours before waking. By this I mean that although the SV is working similarly through the whole
night, it seems to me, the greatest benefits occur in the period mentioned (again am just taking a stab at what the
'magic' might be).
http://www.internetage.ws/cpapdata/dsm- ... 8jun09.pdf - Some near 0.0 nights.
(ignore the 1.0 AI / HI scores as for this machine the software gets it wrong. 1 solitary apnea will show as 1.0 instead
of 0.8 - basically just count the shown AIs & HIs & divide by 8 - allow it to be 2 apneas in the score bar is thick).
D