I'm another one who stopped the nocturia the first night on CPAP. I often think I'd stay on CPAP even if it didn't help anything but that! I used to get up at least 4-5 times, and sometimes 8-10 times. Now, it's very rare to get up once at night -- I think it may have happened twice in six months on CPAP.Muse-Inc wrote:Mermer, there is a new study that says the oxygen deprivation we with apnea experience is just like that experienced at certain levels of high altitude. At that altitude, people develop high blood pressure. The drug used to lower the blood pressure might be protective against the oxygen deprivation damage. There's a link to the study posted here I think last Monday (by Rooster maybe?). The study was on Mt Everest and the drug was an angiotensin receptor blocker. EDIT: See my post just before your latest, I'm the one whose peeing stopped my first night on CPAP, I had some fabulous results right from the gitgo (I had great sleep best I'd had in a decade), the rest of the benefits didn't start for another 9 months. I'm still seeing benefits so don't give up!
FWIW, I take an angiotension receptor blocker (ARB) and it's the first drug that has given me reasonable BP control. My BP was very refractive to therapy. What finally got it down consistently was the combination of the ARB and CPAP. Sadly, many insurance companies have ARBs in the top tier for drug co-pay, and there are no generics, so they are more expensive to buy even with insurance. Some companies won't cover them at all. I pay more than $2 per dose with insurance, and I use what is probably the least expensive ARB.