General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
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LibtardsUnite!
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by LibtardsUnite! » Mon Sep 18, 2017 11:56 am
xxyzx wrote:
There are several types of sleep apnea, but two prominent types include obstructive sleep apnea (most common) and central sleep apnea.
Read the article for all the info.
It said bipap is best for OSA
ASV is needed for central/complex
ASV the pressure targets your input, meaning the target value isn't fixed but instead adapts to the breathing patterns of your patient. Since the device adjusts itself continuously to meet the needs of your patient, your patients experience less discomfort and the pressure subtly changes in a way that keeps them feeling comfortable.
When abnormalities in breathing are detected by the ASV machine, it intervenes to maintain your patient's breathing at 90 percent of what was normal for your patient prior to their sudden breathing change. Once your patient's breathing issue ends, the device adjusts itself again to the normalcy.
Then when your patient's breathing is stable, the device puts out just enough pressure support to give an approximate 50 percent reduction in the patient's efforts to breathe, making the device comfortable for the patient.
It has some contradictions about central apnea issues so be sure to verify anything they or anybody says.
In particular, verify anything xxyzx says! He has now taken to quoting questionable articles to demonstrate that he can read at the third grade level, which is well above his grammar, spelling and punctuation.
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Lucyhere
- Posts: 1949
- Joined: Sun Oct 18, 2015 2:45 pm
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by Lucyhere » Mon Sep 18, 2017 1:44 pm
LibtardsUnite! wrote:
In particular, verify anything xxyzx says! He has now taken to quoting questionable articles to demonstrate that he can read at the third grade level, which is well above his grammar, spelling and punctuation.
Raises hand... may I join in?
However, LU, since you posted in this thread the people who like to delete threads/posts won't be able to now. I am of the opinion that no one has the right to delete a post they don't like or agree with, but in this case...
Resmed AirSense 10 Autoset for her w/humid air/heated Humidifier
Bleep/P10
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nanwilson
- Posts: 3463
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 10:35 am
- Location: Southern Alberta
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by nanwilson » Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:49 pm
xxyzx wrote:Lucyhere wrote:LibtardsUnite! wrote:
In particular, verify anything xxyzx says! He has now taken to quoting questionable articles to demonstrate that he can read at the third grade level, which is well above his grammar, spelling and punctuation.
Raises hand... may I join in?
However, LU, since you posted in this thread the people who like to delete threads/posts won't be able to now. I am of the opinion that no one has the right to delete a post they don't like or agree with, but in this case...
actually anybody can delete a post
it is really easy
libtards have done it to mine
i suspect they quit when the admins slapped their hands for trying to be censaors
WRONG... only those that are registered can delete a post.... Statement 2 WRONG ... admins will not slap their hands, they don't care.
This is an uncensored forum .. if it had administrators and censors you would have been banned the first week you posted.
Started cpap in 2010.. still at it with great results.