mrnetwurm wrote:I don't know what was different about the night that the snoring returned. I have sleepyhead software, but of course, that only tells me whats happening when I use the machine, not when I don't use the machine, which was the point of my experiment.
I haven't downloaded my chip to analyze, but I do have one piece of data I can share. My machine reports AHI. It used to report very consistantly at about 1.1 AHI, now, after the weight loss, it shows .4 average.
Now, that doesnt mean I can dump the machine, but it does mean I am having fewer episodes.
It means that the machine is better able to prevent events. It does not necessarily mean that you would have fewer events without using the machine. It may just mean that the pressure needs are lower. How many events you have each night without treatment is NOT related to how much pressure is required to prevent those events.
For example, somebody with an untreated ahi of 20 may need a pressure of 15 to get an ahi below 5, and somebody else with an untreated ahi of 90 may need a pressure of only 7 to get an ahi less than 5.
The fact that you can get by with a lower pressure does not mean that you would have fewer events when not using a machine. Keep in mind that your machine records the events that were not prevented. It has no idea how many events would have occurred had the pressure not been there to prevent them. I'm sure if you lowered your pressure even more, your ahi would go up. The key is to find the ideal pressure to keep it as comfortable as possible while preventing as many events as possible. Just remember that a good ahi on teh machine means that your *treatment* is working. It doesn't mean that it isn't needed.
Who would have thought it would be this challenging to sleep and breathe at the same time?