Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
I ha dmy first scheduled nap on Saturday, in probably, well ever. Or it was so long ago I dont remember
Usualy if I do have naps they are like most people, by accident.
I just got the machine and thought to get used to it more have a nap. And Im at the age now I decided, whats the harm in having a nap on a day off.
Will I continue it, doubt it, Im pretty active, but layed down for about an hour
Usualy if I do have naps they are like most people, by accident.
I just got the machine and thought to get used to it more have a nap. And Im at the age now I decided, whats the harm in having a nap on a day off.
Will I continue it, doubt it, Im pretty active, but layed down for about an hour
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
I stopped napping because I didn't want to get into bed, hook up, etc for 20 minutes to maybe an hour. That said there is the occasional afternoon I'll finish lunch sitting on the sofa and the next thing I know I'm waking up a bit later. That might happen once every 2 or 3 weeks.
In a world full of locks, love is the key. God is love.
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
Julie wrote:... and never do it without your machine because you'll undo the good built up over nights.
I'm not doubting what you're saying here but I don't understand it. If the nap off CPAP isn't as restful as it would be on CPAP I get how that's not as restful, but I don't get how it undoes a past event, ie sleeping w/CPAP the previous nights. Help me understand that.
In a world full of locks, love is the key. God is love.
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
take some sandpaper, and scrub a spot on your arm till it bleeds.gdgiles wrote:Julie wrote:... and never do it without your machine because you'll undo the good built up over nights.
I'm not doubting what you're saying here but I don't understand it. If the nap off CPAP isn't as restful as it would be on CPAP I get how that's not as restful, but I don't get how it undoes a past event, ie sleeping w/CPAP the previous nights. Help me understand that.
that's sleeping (napping) without cpap.
stop scrubbing... let it heal, that's sleeping with cpap.
now, scrub some more.
see the blood?
does it make sense now?
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
I understand your example but not as it relates to sleeping. To that extent, sandpaper on your skin in small amounts builds up callouses and makes your skin tougher, which is good if you need tougher skin and not good if you don't.
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- deerslayer
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
I Like the Way You Think DenWulfman... wrote:I just took a two hour nap in bed this afternoon.
Of course, as always, I used one of my machines.
Sleep is a good thing.
The more sleep you get above ground may help you spend less time below ground.
Den
.
Feel very Fortunate to be able to make time around 2-3pm to kick back in the Recliner & drift off for an hour .Sometimes with CPAP & Sometimes not, Depends on the Sinus Condition. Not Every Day but i Don't fight the feelin , just go with it..Cell turned off First ! Even though Thyroid meds are supplying some added motivation, the nap deal helps , especially after spending a little time at the gym.
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
*shrug* I can explain it to you, I can't understand it for you.gdgiles wrote:I understand your example but not as it relates to sleeping. To that extent, sandpaper on your skin in small amounts builds up callouses and makes your skin tougher, which is good if you need tougher skin and not good if you don't.
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
I'm not an expert but I would think the gaines made using CPAP would not necissarily be undone by taking naps without CPAP. Perhaps a better description would be that you are increasing the demands on your heart, brain by restricting the flow of oxygen and therefore doing additional damage by taking naps without CPAP?palerider wrote:*shrug* I can explain it to you, I can't understand it for you.gdgiles wrote:I understand your example but not as it relates to sleeping. To that extent, sandpaper on your skin in small amounts builds up callouses and makes your skin tougher, which is good if you need tougher skin and not good if you don't.
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
The more you sleep without the mask the more events will occur, arouse you, mess up your system you and make your nap less productive than if you'd not taken one at all! That's the whole point of using Cpap when sleeping. Got it?
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
to continue YOUR twist of the analogy, apnea puts strain on your heart, which, much like your skin, toughens up, enlarges, and gets less flexible, this causes it to have trouble squeezing out the blood, thus making it harder for it to adequately pump.gdgiles wrote: To that extent, sandpaper on your skin in small amounts builds up callouses and makes your skin tougher, which is good if you need tougher skin and not good if you don't.
this is called congestive heart failure.
it's a bad thing, don't do that to your heart.
Last edited by palerider on Tue Sep 16, 2014 12:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Wulfman...
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
Well, try to understand this. A person known to my wife and I who lived in the Seattle area, and was a CPAP user, had a managerial job......and one night in September of 2007, got called out to resolve some issues at work. When he arrived home in the wee hours of the morning he went to bed and opted NOT to use his machine. He died in his sleep of a heart attack.gdgiles wrote:Julie wrote:... and never do it without your machine because you'll undo the good built up over nights.
I'm not doubting what you're saying here but I don't understand it. If the nap off CPAP isn't as restful as it would be on CPAP I get how that's not as restful, but I don't get how it undoes a past event, ie sleeping w/CPAP the previous nights. Help me understand that.
If you're going to "roll the dice", sometimes you win and sometimes you get "snake eyes" (you lose).
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
Ok, the heart example I understand. Thanks.
In a world full of locks, love is the key. God is love.
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding, but I read Julie's comment as a caution against complacency or non-compliance. If you are struggling with getting used to a face-sucker and opt to take a nap without it, and you *feel* rested after your siesta, there could be a temptation to say "hey, I can sleep without it once in a while." Once in a while becomes twice in a while, becomes 4/7 nights without, and the inconsistency WILL do more damage to your system, much as skipping a few doses of a maintenance medication throws off your system. If you are 90-100% compliant and otherwise relatively healthy, an occasional 45 min nap in the chair may not be as harmful as, say, someone with heart failure already underway and severe obstructive apnea opting to lie down for 20 minutes without the hose... JM$0.02
I think what she was driving at is that it's good sleep hygiene to be in the habit of napping WITH your PAP if you are in the habit of napping, because the longer you sleep without it, regardless of the time be it midday or the wee hours after a bathroom break, the more potential there is for further harm.
I think what she was driving at is that it's good sleep hygiene to be in the habit of napping WITH your PAP if you are in the habit of napping, because the longer you sleep without it, regardless of the time be it midday or the wee hours after a bathroom break, the more potential there is for further harm.
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- chunkyfrog
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Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
To extend the "treated sleep is good medicine" analogy,
the last time I had the flu, I slept nearly 20 hours a day while sick.
My healing time was shortened by probably half if not better.
Putting my "get well mojo" on turbo really works.
the last time I had the flu, I slept nearly 20 hours a day while sick.
My healing time was shortened by probably half if not better.
Putting my "get well mojo" on turbo really works.
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Additional Comments: Airsense 10 Autoset for Her |
Re: Do CPAP users still feel the need for naps?
I was simply trying to explain the way apnea works because he didn't seem to get it. I wasn't making a point for compliance or anything otherwise.