I did extremely well on all parts of the test except for one, the memory test, and specifically, I had trouble with the "delayed recall" part where I was asked to remember 5 words, then a few other tasks were given, and approximately 5 minutes later I was asked to recall those words. I could not recall the words at all and even with hints (e.g.: "a color", "a flower") and even given multiple choices, I had great difficulty remembering the words. Her opinion is that the most likely cause is sleep apnea and that I should pursue optimizing my therapy, especially since there seemed to be some difficulty in finding a pressure that eliminated all of the respiratory events and during my second polysomnography/titration, my oxygenation dipped down to as low as 92% (or 88% if I look at the "wake" column in the table).
I am also waking up groggy and with a dry mouth most days and I have sometimes woken and noticed air escaping out through my lips, so I am starting to suspect that I might be mouth breathing.
Here is a report that I generated from the data on the SD card in my S9:

and an excerpt from my second sleep study/titration:

I'm already in contact with my sleep doctor and will likely schedule an appointment with him.
Some questions:
1. The 95th percentile for the leak rate is 19.2 - is that OK or is it too high?
2. The AHI is 2.3 and almost 80% of that comes from central apneas. I realize that 2.3 is a lot better than what I was pre-CPAP, but could that still be causing oxygen desaturations and could it be interrupting my sleep too much? I'm a little worried that the pressure is too high and it's causing the central apneas. On my initial study, I had only 2 central apneas (the longest being 19 seconds) -> a central index of 0.3. On the second (titration) study, I had 13 central apneas (the longest being 27 seconds) -> a central index of 2.1. In fact, just noticed that my apnea index is higher in the second study (2.7 vs. 0.9). On the other hand, the hypopnea index was reduced from 26.5 to 8.1 so that's good I guess.
3. The oxygen saturation of 92% - it seems that doctors worry when it dips below 90%? 92% is kind of borderline -- could it be contributing to my cognitive difficulties? In fact, in the polysomnography report, it says 92% was the minimum SpO2 during sleep; while awake (perhaps from an apnea event?) I actually had a minimum SpO2 of 88%, which in fact is the exact same minimum SpO2 that I had in my first polysomnography, performed with no CPAP. Another interesting factoid: one the first study I had zero oxygen desaturation events. On the second, I had 16, giving an index of 2.6. That seems most suspicious...
4. The minimum pulse rate of 33 - is that a cause for concern? My cardiac events table shows all zeros.
The more and more I look at the numbers, the more suspicious I am that things are not much better now than pre-CPAP (except that it got rid of my snoring). The doctor seemed quite satisfied after the second sleep study. And at the time I trusted his judgment. But now I'm not so sure that I should be content with how things are now.
I guess I'm wondering if CPAP is helping me but not enough?