cwsanfor wrote:I'm getting a good AHI, about 0.8 over a week
That's not just good. That's excellent! As good as "zero" in my opinion.
cwsanfor wrote:but there are some events I'd like to minimize.
Well, I personally wouldn't give those leftover crumbs a second thought.
cwsanfor wrote:I know that 0.8 AHI is good, and that this may be Sleep Apnea as a Hobby, as SAG/NotMuffy put it
Yes, I think that's what it would be. You're already getting a much lower AHI than probably most "normal" people have -- people who have a sleep study and are told they don't have OSA. "Normal" being AHI under 5.0
cwsanfor wrote:2) I still have apneic some events I'd like to reduce.
If you want to try that just out of
curiosity, I understand. If you want to do some hobby tweaking just to see what the data reports, ok.
However, if you're trying to improve how you feel, I don't think trying to eliminate those few random "events" is worth pursuing at all.
cwsanfor wrote:3) On some charts other than this one I show one or two CA (clear airway apneas) a night.
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Am I correct in thinking that these are best ignored?
Yes.
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cwsanfor wrote:I'm really happy with my current results, but I am a geek, and like to optimize things. I tend to spend some time fiddling with a new gadget, get it as optimal as I can, then let it run.
I understand that. So, yeah, have fun fiddling with it.
cwsanfor wrote:It also seems that I can detect the difference between say, 1.8 and 0.6 AHI by how I feel the next day, so this is not entirely an idle activity.
In that case, before I started ANY tweaking-settings experiments at all, I'd try this little experiment first to see if there really was a possible correlation:
I would not look at ANY machine data at all until the day was finished and bedtime was nigh. I'd make a note of how I felt that day. THEN (and only then) I'd look at the data. I'd keep doing that for a solid month -- without changing any settings.
Never, ever looking at the data until
after I had noted how I felt at the end of the day.
Better yet, I'd do more than make a note just about "how I felt." In the interests of finding out if there might be OTHER things affecting how I had felt that day, I'd note what I ate and drank, and what time I consumed it. More nasal stuffiness than usual? More exercise than usual? Unusual stress in job or family? Acid reflux acting up? Change in meds or the time they were taken? Went to bed (or got up) later or earlier than usual? Sleep environment warmer or colder or noisier than usual? More or fewer wake ups in general the night before? Wake-ups due to noticeable mask leaks? Wake-ups from noticeable pain issues?
If there are things
other than machine settings that could account for a difference in how a person feels day-to-day, there wouldn't be much point in trying to zero in just on "settings" that are
already doing their part of the job great.