Starlette wrote:Refresh my memory Pugsy, what is a central and what would that look like on SH?
Centrals are open airway cessation of breathing....clear airway flagged events....Respironics call them clear airway and ResMed calls them centrals. Within the limitations of the machines (remember they don't know if you are asleep or not, turning over in bed or not, or just going through a sleep stage transition) they are essentially the same thing being called 2 different names.
Starlette wrote:What is meant by “twiddling its thumbs”?
Sits there and does nothing. Sometimes it is supposed to sit there and do nothing.
When it senses an open airway cessation of breathing...clear airway (central) they simply won't respond. They aren't supposed to.
Starlette wrote:“if the normal event precursors that are needed” Is there a way to correct that?
The normal event precursors are what the machine is designed in its algorithm to respond to. If they are there it should respond. If not there it won't respond. You really have no control over them short of keeping the minimum pressure up to where the pressure keeps them reduced.
The machine is designed to respond to and eliminate obstructive components or obstructive precursors that normally precede a full or partial collapse of the airway. The whole idea is prevention and not blowing through and correcting an event that has just occurred.
Starlette wrote:Take a step back and go back to those reports where the AHI is higher and the total events are higher...remove the clear airway event totals from the overall totals and see how many are left. Remember we don't treat them with pressure anyway with these type of machines. How scarey are the numbers with CAs removed?
Index = 5.22, 6.65, 6.58
You have lost me here. Not indexes...total events since you seem to worry about total events.
I can't see the events tabs for total event numbers in each category but I can backwards figure them to get close.
Take July 31. AHI 4.16 and the Clear Airway index is 2.58 and total number of events 29 for almost 7 hours.
Your AHI if we remove the CA index is only 1.58.
62% of your AHI happens to be clear airway events... so 62 % of the original total of 29 events is roughly 18 events.
Remove those 18 events from your overall total and you only have 11 events during the 7 hours. Not scarey at all.
Correct me if I am wrong but it seems like you have fixated on total AHI and total number of events and have been trying to evaluate pressure needs based on those totals. Trying to figure out a pressure to reduce a total number that has a high % or events that we don't fix with pressures.
Let's address obstructive event stuff right now. Address the centrals (clear airway) later.
Of the 3 reports below the one with the max at 13 showed one time where it wanted to go higher. Most of the time you don't need that much. I think I thought one of those with the max being maxed out often June 17 was with max of 13 but I see now it was 12.5. It is hard toggling back and forth trying to keep each one straight in my mind. Based on that re-evaluation it appears that 13 works for the bulk of the time unless you see a lot of other reports where the 13 is maxed out often.
If you are afraid that opening the max up to 20 will present problems with aerophagia and such then just try 14 or 15.
Heck, try 13.5. Don't base your decisions entirely on what I would do. Base your decisions on what you understand about what you are seeing and what you feel comfortable doing. I don't think you need much more than 13 based on these reports and even then you don't seem to need it for very long or very often and that is why I asked about possible positional issues or maybe REM sleep or heck maybe a combination of both. It wouldn't be an impossible combination. To me it really doesn't really matter so much why you need it...just that you need it and blaming supine sleeping or REM offers and explanation.
If you need it, you need it no matter what the cause. Besides it doesn't appear that there is a strong likelihood that whatever those events might need, it doesn't appear to be grossly higher than what you need for the bulk of the night. You max out often with maximum at 12.5 and occasionally at 13.0 maximum. I would think that there is a strong possibility that you only need a little more maximum to eliminate the maxing out. If for some reason having more maximum and reaching it does happen to cause a problem with aerophagia I don't see any harm in limiting the max at 13 and just compromising. It's not like we see a truck load of events present themselves when the max is reached. It wouldn't be the end of the world to hit your max every now and then for brief periods of time if reaching it caused problems.
Robysue knows that she limits her maximum and she has had to compromise. She knows that she needs a little more pressure sometimes but when she gets more pressure her aerophagia really presents much more of a problem for her than limiting the max and letting a few events slip past the defenses. Getting good sleep is much more important than a good math score.
Feeling better the next day without belly pain is more important than a good math score. Besides...and AHI of 2 isn't horrible anyway.
Now the clear airway events need addressing. I will call them centrals just because centrals contain less letters to type but I am meaning the same thing.
I am more concerned with your fragmented sleep and short hours than I am with your obstructive events and your maximum pressures. I would bet my last dollar that the bulk of your clear airway events are from restless sleep or mini arousals or semi awake events.
I don't think that they are pressure related at all. Your June 18 report was really quite excellent. AHI 2.04 with half of them being central. No big clusters or groups of anything. Notice the small grouping at both times when you first turned the machine on...at the first of the night and after the therapy break...Roughly maybe 15 minutes or so with a little grouping. I bet you were still awake or semi awake for those. Same thing for the last little group at 6 AM.
If you really had a problem with centrals we would expect to see them in bulk on this report also but we don't. It is really a great report.
So that brings us to a big question...why the big difference? This great report and the reports with a much greater event count? I don't know the answer. I think something is disturbing the overall quality of your sleep and some nights you don't sleep as well. I don't really think it is leaks unless you are having mask issues and waking up fiddling with the mask or something. There is some up and down of the leak line but it is far from horrible. I don't know if the events themselves are disruptive. We might explain it when you wake up after a large grouping of something but you didn't have it happen on June 18. So nothing is grossly consistent that might point to a reason.
Is it possible that the APAP pressure variations themselves are disruptive? Could be. That is why I asked what your reports looked like back when you had the Pro and were using straight CPAP.
I don't really like to tell someone "use this pressure". What I really like to do is get people thinking about what they are seeing and get their mind going and thinking about what is going on, why is it going on, what can I do to change it?
Will tweaking your pressures improve things? I don't know because we don't know for sure what is going on. We don't know what is behind those large clusters of events that are messing with not only the numerical data but also point to a good chance that something is very likely messing with your overall sleep quality also.
Tweaking the pressures is something that we can do to see if it helps. We feel we need to do something. Hence your original post here. It's okay to try things. Just remember that some things we can fix with pressures and some things we can't.
Don't fixate on the total numbers without understanding that part of those numbers we can't fix with pressures.
Maybe you need a tiny bit more minimum and maximum on the off chance that the events that are occurring are disrupting sleep. Maybe straight cpap would be less disruptive. Something is disruptive but I don't know what it is. About all we can do is systematically try to address things that it might be to see if we can change things for the better.
I may have to RISE but I refuse to SHINE.