Issue With Resmed S9

General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
-SWS
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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by -SWS » Sat Apr 16, 2011 2:57 pm

robysue wrote:
-SWS wrote:Most of us CPAP patients tolerate that intrathoracic pressure increase just fine. However, certain types of cardiovascular patients can incur a potentially problematic decrease of venous return as a result of that CPAP pressure:
Shahrokh Javaheri, M.D wrote: Central Sleep Apnea in Congestive Heart Failure: Treatment of Central Sleep Apnea

Furthermore, caution should be exercised with use of nasal CPAP. Because of increased intrathoracic pressure, cardiac output may decrease resulting in hypotension, particularly in patients with atrial fibrillation[99] and those in whom right ventricular volume pressure characteristics are on the ascending limb of the Frank-Starling curve. In such patients, right ventricular stroke volume is preload dependent, and a decrease in venous return could result in hypotension. A similar mechanism may result in hypotension in patients in whom left ventricular stroke volume is preload dependent. Such reduction in cardiac output could result in reduction in coronary blood flow and ischemia, particularly in patients with established coronary artery disease.
In those cardiovascular cases unnecessary CPAP pressure is not at all a good idea.
I understand this concern for patients with established coronary artery disease. But presumably the problem would exist for such a patient using APAP regardless of sleeping position. And the DME simply said: APAP is bad for side sleepers and said nothing about patients with heart disease.

So -SWS. please correct me if I'm wrong, but here's my understanding of APAP, heart disease and side sleeping :

1) Some patients do need to be cautious about too much CPAP pressure and among that group are patients with existing coronary artery disease and existing heart disease. APAP may not be the best choice for these patients regardless of the patient's preferred sleeping position. And the quoted text seems to indicate that CPAP itself may be problematic for these patients to use as well.

2) Patients who prefer to sleep on their side are no more or no less likely to belong to the patients in the category listed in item 1) than those who prefer to sleep on their back or stomach. (And if this is not true, can you point me to some evidence that side sleeping is an indicator of higher than normal risk for coronary artery disease, for example?)

3) Therefor, there is no reason to tell a patient who you know sleeps on their side that side sleeping and APAP use are not a good combination. If you know the patient has real risks (such as the cardiac risks) with an APAP potentially providing too much pressure, cite the real reason the APAP is a bad idea for them. If you don't know whether the side-sleeping patient has any real risks associated with APAP use, then treat them the same way you'd treat a back or stomach sleeper.
Robysue, there's absolutely no reason whatsoever that *ANY* DME clinician should *EVER* impose a general treatment policy like that. They are not the ones who prescribe treatment modality.... PERIOD. I'll repeat that to make my point even clearer: A DME clinician should not and cannot specify WHICH treatment modalities patients should be receiving. Rather, the prescribing doctor is the one who prescribes treatment modality based on the PSG results and other clinical procedures that the DME clinician does not perform.

Bear in mind the context of my above post is ONLY to answer Bernieray's question about the underlying physiologic mechanism being discussed. If BillH had those cardiovascular problems, then the prescribing doctor would impose very specific treatment requirements and cautions. Rather, this clearly sounds like a case of a DME imposing a general treatment policy that maximizes DME profit----rather than serving the patient population's best interest on a genuine epidemiological basis.

So I'm not backing up the DME's line of crap if that's what you're wondering. But the physiologic mechanism Bernieray asked about is worth understanding--- given it's potential importance for some portion of our message board.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by BernieRay » Sat Apr 16, 2011 3:32 pm

And I appreciate the info, SWS! I had no idea that it could be detrimental in some cases.
Ray
Diagnosed in 1997

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by robysue » Sun Apr 17, 2011 7:11 am

-SWS wrote: Robysue, there's absolutely no reason whatsoever that *ANY* DME clinician should *EVER* impose a general treatment policy like that. They are not the ones who prescribe treatment modality.... PERIOD. I'll repeat that to make my point even clearer: A DME clinician should not and cannot specify WHICH treatment modalities patients should be receiving. Rather, the prescribing doctor is the one who prescribes treatment modality based on the PSG results and other clinical procedures that the DME clinician does not perform.
Thanks -SWS for this clear statement about the DME's behavior. I'm sorry that I misread some of the language in your first post.
Bear in mind the context of my above post is ONLY to answer Bernieray's question about the underlying physiologic mechanism being discussed. If BillH had those cardiovascular problems, then the prescribing doctor would impose very specific treatment requirements and cautions. Rather, this clearly sounds like a case of a DME imposing a general treatment policy that maximizes DME profit----rather than serving the patient population's best interest on a genuine epidemiological basis.
Again, thanks for clear, unambiguous language! And again, I apologize for my brain fog in not figuring out what you were saying the first time around.
So I'm not backing up the DME's line of crap if that's what you're wondering. But the physiologic mechanism Bernieray asked about is worth understanding--- given it's potential importance for some portion of our message board.
Strongly agree that this physiologic mechanism is worth understanding.

And a question to try to further that understanding: Are the kind of cardiovascular issues involved in the paper you cite correlated in any way to preferred sleep position? Keep in mind, I'm asking about mere correlation---if there is a correlation, I don't care if causation is not understood at all.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by Pugsy » Sun Apr 17, 2011 8:30 am

BillH wrote:I have Rescan version 3.13.018. I downloaded last nights data. Here are the results:

Pressure: 11.0 EPR Full Time
Leak: Median 1.2 95the Percentile 16.8 Maximum 37.2 (I am still trying to find a mask that will go all night without leaking. Lost cause so far)
Apnea Index: 0.5 AHI 0.5 Obstructive 0.3
Cental 0.1

So, is there a guide on how to read the data?
Not any special guide as far as numbers and what it defines, if that is what you are asking? Flow graphs questions? Usually posted on the forum. Since the data collected is supposed to be viewed by medical personnel who should already have knowledge of what all these things mean, there is no special "how to understand" what is shown in ResScan or Encore Pro. There may be a glossary for terms.

There is a tutorial for how to do the little ins and outs and special things in the software.http://montfordhouse.com/cpap/resscan_tutorial/

Did you have some specific questions about something on the reports? Ask it and someone could explain it.

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BillH
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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by BillH » Sun Apr 17, 2011 9:57 am

Pugsy wrote:
BillH wrote:I have Rescan version 3.13.018. I downloaded last nights data. Here are the results:

Pressure: 11.0 EPR Full Time
Leak: Median 1.2 95the Percentile 16.8 Maximum 37.2 (I am still trying to find a mask that will go all night without leaking. Lost cause so far)
Apnea Index: 0.5 AHI 0.5 Obstructive 0.3
Cental 0.1

So, is there a guide on how to read the data?
Not any special guide as far as numbers and what it defines, if that is what you are asking? Flow graphs questions? Usually posted on the forum. Since the data collected is supposed to be viewed by medical personnel who should already have knowledge of what all these things mean, there is no special "how to understand" what is shown in ResScan or Encore Pro. There may be a glossary for terms.

There is a tutorial for how to do the little ins and outs and special things in the software.http://montfordhouse.com/cpap/resscan_tutorial/

Did you have some specific questions about something on the reports? Ask it and someone could explain it.
Thanks, lots of good information in the tutorial. I am just starting on this, seems to be a wealth of information. I know this software was most likely never intended to make it into the hands of patients. I was wondering if someone had written a guide on what the numbers mean. I will post specific questions.

Thanks again for the tutorial

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-SWS
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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by -SWS » Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:09 am

robysue wrote: And a question to try to further that understanding: Are the kind of cardiovascular issues involved in the paper you cite correlated in any way to preferred sleep position? Keep in mind, I'm asking about mere correlation---if there is a correlation, I don't care if causation is not understood at all.
Robysue, I don't know.... So I just now performed this curiosity search:
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?as_q= ... s=14&hl=en

This white paper suggests that venous return may improve with lateral versus supine sleeping:
Naughton, Thomson, et al wrote: Increased venous return in the lateral position may contribute to maintaining increased cardiac output, decreasing circulation time, and thus favoring ventilatory stability
http://journalsleep.org/Articles/290808.pdf

I'm not even sure if there is correlative epidemiology kicking around to answer your excellent sleep-position question, Robysue. If I find any studies like that I'll insert them in this thread.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by Pugsy » Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:12 am

Regarding the event indexes, less than 5 is considered by the medical profession to be effective treatment.
You have that goal easily with lots of room to spare if the leak hasn't impaired the numbers.

Your leak needs improvement but you knew that. ResMed says over 24 L/min and the machine may not effective treat or score events.

Looking at the leak graph itself will show you just how long you were over that red line. That is probably more important than looking at the overall leak number. If a long time spent over the red line, not good. If minor short length of time then not as bad. Sometimes a huge leak can sort of falsely inflate that 95% number. Sometimes it means you spent a long time at leaks near that red line and that might affect those good numbers you are seeing.
Meaning that the machine may not be scoring effectively.

I am not aware of anyone writing a general "how to interpret the readings" guide for ResScan. Janknitz has one for Respironics. There may be one somewhere or perhaps someone would compose a very general "guide".

I am assuming that you do understand the AHI< HI< OA< CA, etc. and it was just how to interpret the numbers that caused the questions. Flow graph? My eyes glaze over when I try to understand it. Start with the basics and how the graphs related to times, events, numbers and how you feel. Then start to dig deeper as the brain becomes used to the minute details...

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by BillH » Sun Apr 17, 2011 11:18 am

Pugsy wrote:Regarding the event indexes, less than 5 is considered by the medical profession to be effective treatment.
You have that goal easily with lots of room to spare if the leak hasn't impaired the numbers....
Just to clairify, we are talking 5.0, not 0.5?
Pugsy wrote:Your leak needs improvement but you knew that. ResMed says over 24 L/min and the machine may not effective treat or score events.
Finding a mask that will seal all night is a real problem. It seems that the head gear is relaxing allowing the leaks. Maybe if i used super glue?

Education continues. Thanks for the help.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by Pugsy » Sun Apr 17, 2011 11:32 am

BillH wrote: Pugsy wrote:Regarding the event indexes, less than 5 is considered by the medical profession to be effective treatment.
You have that goal easily with lots of room to spare if the leak hasn't impaired the numbers....



Just to clairify, we are talking 5.0, not 0.5?

Yes, generally accepted "number" for adequate therapy is less than 5.0 AHI.

Now some people may notice a difference in how they feel from a 4.8 AHI night and a 2.5 AHI night. Especially if there happens to be "clusters" of events and periods of no events at all. So maybe the bulk of the events happens in 3 clusters and not spread out over the night.....I am this way. I can tell a difference. On paper I shouldn't feel the difference but I do. Just another one of those many things related to OSA that comes with the YMMV sticker.

Mask comfort and leaks is the number one hardest part to all this cpap therapy.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by billbolton » Sun Apr 17, 2011 4:42 pm

Pugsy wrote:Yes, generally accepted "number" for adequate therapy is less than 5.0 AHI.
Well, an AHI of 5.0 or less is generally regarded as being in the normal sleep range as far as apneacic-like events is concerned, which is not quite the same thing.

If a patient has an AHI of 5.0 or less they are not considered to be suffering from Obstructive Sleep Apnea, which has a number of implications in terms of both any legal liability and insurance benefit purposes....... but that does not mean they may not have other sleep disorders.
Pugsy wrote:On paper I shouldn't feel the difference but I do. Just another one of those many things related to OSA that comes with the YMMV sticker.
That may well indicate you have other sleep disorders which are unaddressed.

Cheers,

Bill

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by Pugsy » Sun Apr 17, 2011 9:15 pm

billbolton wrote: Pugsy wrote:On paper I shouldn't feel the difference but I do. Just another one of those many things related to OSA that comes with the YMMV sticker.


That may well indicate you have other sleep disorders which are unaddressed.
Bill,

Thank you for the diagnosis.
If you have read much of anything I have ever said you will see that I do have other health issues that affect the quality of my sleep and thus how I feel and this is no surprise to me.

When someone asks me why they don't feel so great AND they appear to have adequate therapy (at least per the reports) I always suggest investigating other possible contributing factors and there is a long list of them. Starting point is always the OSA though.

OP in this thread was wanting general guidelines on what the data meant. I saw no need to go into a long drawn out discussion on the possible implications of various scenarios. I like the KISS principle when I can use it.
If you wish to offer a different point of view then offer it. You are entitled to your opinion just as I am entitled to mine. There is nothing wrong with what I said.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by billbolton » Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:01 pm

Pugsy wrote:There is nothing wrong with what I said.
Yes, there was. Over simplifying is not at all helpful.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by Pugsy » Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:20 pm

billbolton wrote: Pugsy wrote:There is nothing wrong with what I said.


Yes, there was. Over simplifying is not at all helpful.
Well I disagree. So we are at an impasse. It's not the first time and likely won't be the last. I am not going to change the way I do things because you don't think it is helpful or you want to critique my comments.

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by idamtnboy » Sun Apr 17, 2011 11:48 pm

Pugsy wrote:
billbolton wrote: Pugsy wrote:There is nothing wrong with what I said.


Yes, there was. Over simplifying is not at all helpful.
Well I disagree. So we are at an impasse. It's not the first time and likely won't be the last. I am not going to change the way I do things because you don't think it is helpful or you want to critique my comments.
You forgot to add, "So there!"

[Couldn't resist!]

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Re: Issue With Resmed S9

Post by Pugsy » Mon Apr 18, 2011 7:53 am

idamtnboy wrote: You forgot to add, "So there!"

[Couldn't resist!]
yeah and the stomping of my foot to go along with it.

End of an awful day yesterday. Internet access was slower than usual which made it worse than old dial up. I was cross and in a bad mood. My back was absolutely killing me for some reason. Normally I try to avoid such childish banter but sometimes..... you know how it is. I am human and have all the human frailties. Plus I am a Taurus (birthday next month) and bull headed is a mild description of my temperamant.

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