Thanks Snork! gotta get me one of those "Nozovents", shoot I should have bought stock in BreathRight strips long ago, I use one of those under my mask every night. Every costco trip I grab a couple boxes, but they just increased the price the last trip.snork1 wrote:That seems WAY too pricey for a dental device!
I just picked up my TAP Titanium for $1700 "installed" and that was going through a certified sleep dentist. (and darn happy with it with two nights so far)
The hot thing being checked out over at the only "dental device" sub heading in a forum that I am aware of, is the Somnoguard AP for people that are budget limited or just want to "experiment" with a reasonably priced dental device to see if it might work for them. Its only $169 but does not come with a dentist....so you are on your own for tracking issues.
http://nosnorezone.com/order.html
But for a tenth of the price of a dentist installed TAP it pretty much works on the same principal and we have at least two good reports, and a couple of more "lab rats" with some known history on the forum are going to be test driving the Somnoguard AP soon to confirm the positive reports.
sure beats $5K for a device from a non-certified dentist that is dabbling in apnea treatment.
I wouldn't beat the dentist up too bad, sure his marketing skills aren't the greatest but I think the answer to coming up with a solution to OSA is with addressing the tongue issue. I don't think that device shown in the video is the actual device that retains the tongue. Since my kid is a Dentist and I've spent a few bucks getting her towards that goal, I can assure you they have to go through nearly the same training and state board exams as a MD, then they have to have the dental skills and knowledge to go along with it.
Where they attended Dental school has a lot to do with it. There are Dental schools that teach you how to just pass the State board exams, and there are schools that teach you to become a good Dentist where you pass the board exams with ease.