Re: 3 Weeks and I'm Ready to Give Up
Posted: Sun Jul 26, 2015 7:44 pm
I'm just about sold on the P10s. My head is a little on the large side at 23.5 inches. Will that matter?
the strap is adjustable.rockncountry101 wrote:I'm just about sold on the P10s. My head is a little on the large side at 23.5 inches. Will that matter?
You need to go to a DME and try on a P10 and see if it fits on your head, unless someone here has the same size head you do. I have the P10 and love it, but the straps are only adjustable to the extent that they can stretch in different directions so they fit on a person's head better, if the headgear fits their head to start with. If the headgear is too small, you will have to modify it somehow, maybe cutting the straps and using velcro to enlarge them, which I think would be feasible. The nasal pillows are pretty durable. I have used this mask for more than a year with the same nasal pillows. If the headgear will fit you and you can adjust to nasal pillows, this is a very good mask--very lightweight and provides very good therapy for me and a lot of others. As for nasal pillows increasing a person's nostril size, I've never heard of that. There are three sizes of nasal pillows with the standard Airfit P!0 (small, medium and large). You won't know if any of them fit you until you try the headgear and nasal pillows.rockncountry101 wrote:I'm just about sold on the P10s. My head is a little on the large side at 23.5 inches. Will that matter?
MarylandCPAPer wrote:You need to go to a DME and try on a P10 and see if it fits on your head, unless someone here has the same size head you do. I have the P10 and love it, but the straps are only adjustable to the extent that they can stretch in different directions so they fit on a person's head better, if the headgear fits their head to start with. If the headgear is too small, you will have to modify it somehow, maybe cutting the straps and using velcro to enlarge them, which I think would be feasible. The nasal pillows are pretty durable. I have used this mask for more than a year with the same nasal pillows. If the headgear will fit you and you can adjust to nasal pillows, this is a very good mask--very lightweight and provides very good therapy for me and a lot of others. As for nasal pillows increasing a person's nostril size, I've never heard of that. There are three sizes of nasal pillows with the standard Airfit P!0 (small, medium and large). You won't know if any of them fit you until you try the headgear and nasal pillows.rockncountry101 wrote:I'm just about sold on the P10s. My head is a little on the large side at 23.5 inches. Will that matter?
I'm one of those with the big head. You can tell that if regular winter caps for adults at the store usually don't fit. I find the p10 just a little too tight, although it is more stable than the Wisp. I put one strap on top of my head and that is working. Over time the straps stretch more. I get a sore nose though, so I will probably stay with the Wisp. Wisp is far more adjustable, but the back tends to slide up when I'm moving around. Still a work in progress.Pugsy wrote:rockncountry101 wrote:
Main drawback for the P10 is for the people who have really large heads. The elastic might not stretch out enough.
The Swift FX nasal pillow does have more ability to fine tune the fitting adjustments.
Watch the fitting videos (available at the mask product page at cpap.com).
I think that there is always some little something on just about any mask out there that could stand improvement and that little something could very well vary from person to person depending on our personal preferences. Mask straps sliding upwards in the back is a common "problem" for a lot of people including myself especially since I prefer minimal mask/headgear and wear things really loose anyway.SewTired wrote:I find the p10 just a little too tight, although it is more stable than the Wisp. I put one strap on top of my head and that is working. Over time the straps stretch more. I get a sore nose though, so I will probably stay with the Wisp. Wisp is far more adjustable, but the back tends to slide up when I'm moving around. Still a work in progress.