forgetcolor wrote:Are 'centrals' indicated in sleepyhead as 'clear airway apneas', or CAs? (as opposed to hypopneas and obstructive apneas) I can't find any way to remove it from the calculation, but the overview does calc some averages:
Yes....centrals are clear airway cessation of breathing..so we use the terms interchangeably.
Remember that the machine has only one dimension to evaluate whether the event is an open airway or a closed airway. So within the limitations of the machine (sometimes it will score awake or semi awake events that a tech in a sleep lab would discard) we call them either.
There is no way to remove the Central Index from the AHI in the software. You just need to mentally remove it.
forgetcolor wrote:So is this what you're referring to...that the CAs are about half the AHI, so a pressure tweak is not needed? Is this because the pressure mitigates obstructive apneas but not central apneas? Still trying to understand all this.
This is correct. We don't try to treat the central component of an AHI with pressure. It won't help and could make things worse.
forgetcolor wrote:
Also, what about the 'peak AHI' graph?
Ignore it for now. It is mainly a way of looking to see how many events occurred within that hour.
The one really bad hour that you mentioned...could have been "awake" events being scored in error during one of your frequent wake ups. To give you an example..if we turn over in bed many of us will hold our breath. It is common and we simply don't realize that we do it. The machine doesn't know that when you hold your breath that is it on purpose so it may flag that episode as a central. Have a whole bunch of tossing and turning and likely the report will be pretty ugly but it is a false ugly. I really don't care for this particular feature in the reports as it is often misunderstood and causes panic.
I turned mine off. I don't even care to see that graph.
Now regarding how you feel. Better but not ready for a marathon yet?
If you are "waking up" a lot can you pin point the reason? Is it cpap related or just something that you do anyway and have for a long time? Fragmented sleep will wreck havoc on sleep architecture and if you don't get the normal cycles of sleep it makes things pretty difficult to have optimal feelings.
So try to evaluate why the frequent awakenings. Pain? Meds? Bed comfort? Mask comfort? Anything?
I myself had great numbers after some initial tweaking with some improvement but not "great". My main issue with fragmented sleep was due to pain in my back and pelvis. Every little movement caused pain bad enough to wake me up so I was having 20 to 30 awakenings a night. Once I got some meds to help with the pain and sleep...I felt noticeably better. Not the miracle but noticeably better.
So take a hard look at any reason for waking up. Sleep Hygiene...habit...cpap related...external things...anything and then work on those things. The cpap machine does a good job with the sleep apnea thing but doesn't work so great when the reason for fragmented sleep is unrelated to the actual sleep apnea events. CPAP doesn't fix bad sleep unless the bad sleep was related solely to the apneas.
I may have to RISE but I refuse to SHINE.