hey, i well remember you giving me hell about seven years ago for failure to understand!



hey, i well remember you giving me hell about seven years ago for failure to understand!
Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ P10 Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Machine: ResMed AirSense™ 10 AutoSet™ CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
um... it ... worked?
The median pressure is 8.42... I'm struggling to understand why setting my min to 8.4 makes sense if half the time is spent under that. To be clear I'm genuinely struggling to understand that - not being snarky! I'm still building my mental model for how this all hangs together. Is "set your min pressure to your average" a rule of thumb?zonker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:12 pmlook again.
that green pressure line shows you are spending more time above 8.4 than below it.
btw, close on the quote feature, but no cigar.![]()
when you see this message, you'll see two symbols ! and ". choose the second. that will quote me in full AND give me a notification.
continued good luck!
Machine: AirSense™ 10 CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ N20 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Curious what your thinking is behind setting max to 20? Thanks!palerider wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:15 pmOh, man, you make me proud. That's SPOT ON! I do love people that pay attention.
I might add that raising the max pressure would be good too, since 10 is too low. (yeah, as usual I'd say to set it to 20 and forget it).Yeah, I just stumbled back on your reply.![]()
Machine: AirSense™ 10 CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ N20 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Thanks. I've tried a full face mask and found is super uncomfortable. Maybe it was the wrong one. I'll try mouth taping tonight though. Didn't love it but maybe that's because I want to mouth breathe!tisket wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:24 pmI don't claim to be any sort of expert. But the same thing happened to both my girlfriend and I after each of us had been using cpap for a year or 18 months. We suddenly started getting large leaks. What I eventually figured out with help from people here was that they were mouth leaks. We started taping our mouths shut and the leaks stopped.
A chinstrap will not stop leaks if you are using a nasal mask/nasal pillows. Try this: close your mouth completely, clench your teeth together, and try to blow air out your mouth. You will succeed. That is because having lips and teeth closed (what a chinstrap helps with) will not stop air pressure. What does stop it is having your tongue on the roof of your mouth, sealing the airway. If you position your tongue properly against the roof of your mouth you cannot blow air out.
If your tongue relaxes while you are asleep, the air blasting out your mouth tends to wake you up, maybe only partially, and you instantly put your tongue back where it belongs and go back to sleep. (Sometimes it would wake me up completely and I would feel the air blasting.) At first anyway. After a year or more of using cpap, though, I've found a lot of people learn to sleep through these mouth leaks the same way they sleep through other cpap sensations and discomforts. It can take a long time before you (while asleep or half-awake) put your tongue back in position to seal the airway through your mouth.
Solutions for this that I know of include using a full face mask (the official answer), or mouth taping. We went with mouth taping, which a lot of people do because of this situation, but you may wish to try a full face mask. (I tried several but could not get a good seal around my cheeks, you may have better luck.)
Machine: AirSense™ 10 CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ N20 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
I always advocate for a max of 20 except in exceptional circumstances, because all you're doing by setting the max lower is potentially preventing your auto machine from doing it's job.
I think at first the entire cpap experience is alien and every little thing wakes you up (at least it did me, in the end had to get a Hose Buddy to get the hose out of the bed, I roll around a lot and the hose in the bed would break the pillows seal by tugging on it) but after awhile you get used to it and sleep through things like leaks. So when your tongue relaxes it doesn't instantly wake you up enough to put your tongue back, so you get a mouth leak for awhile, and you sleep through it.vintage wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:21 pmBTW re: this:
> But the same thing happened to both my girlfriend and I after each of us had been using cpap for a year or 18 months. We suddenly started getting large leaks. What I eventually figured out with help from people here was that they were mouth leaks.
What do you think changed between when you weren't having mouth leaks in the first 12-18 months and when you did? Is that a thing, that people mouth leak after some time using a CPAP?
Machine: ResMed AirSense™ 10 AutoSet™ CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
> The machine won't increase the pressure unless it needs to, so why not remove the restriction, and let the machine do it's job?palerider wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:51 pmI always advocate for a max of 20 except in exceptional circumstances, because all you're doing by setting the max lower is potentially preventing your auto machine from doing it's job.
Zonker pointed that out in his explanation, your machine hit it's max pressure, and couldn't go as high as it wanted to in order to normalize your breathing.
The machine won't increase the pressure unless it needs to, so why not remove the restriction, and let the machine do it's job?
Machine: AirSense™ 10 CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ N20 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Interesting theory that makes a lot of sense. Appreciate you sharing your insights here.tisket wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:56 pmI think at first the entire cpap experience is alien and every little thing wakes you up (at least it did me, in the end had to get a Hose Buddy to get the hose out of the bed, I roll around a lot and the hose in the bed would break the pillows seal by tugging on it) but after awhile you get used to it and sleep through things like leaks. So when your tongue relaxes it doesn't instantly wake you up enough to put your tongue back, so you get a mouth leak for awhile, and you sleep through it.vintage wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:21 pmBTW re: this:
> But the same thing happened to both my girlfriend and I after each of us had been using cpap for a year or 18 months. We suddenly started getting large leaks. What I eventually figured out with help from people here was that they were mouth leaks.
What do you think changed between when you weren't having mouth leaks in the first 12-18 months and when you did? Is that a thing, that people mouth leak after some time using a CPAP?
Machine: AirSense™ 10 CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ N20 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Great explainer zonker.zonker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 3:59 pmi'll take a crack at it and palerider can correct any of my errors.
see the chart that is labeled "pressure"? it has a green line those goes up and down, up and down and so forth. this chart has numbers on the left hand side. this tells you what pressure the machine putting out for each minute that you have the mask on.
the pressure starts at 5, of course, because that's what the machine is set to start at. but then, the pressure slowly goes up as it begins to react to the events happening while you sleep. it rises to 9, then falls back. it ten raises again until in reaches 10. it can't go any further than that because the machine is capped at a maximum of 10.
and so it goes throughout your sleep, up and down. BUT it never goes back to 5. the lowest it gets is just under 7. if you set the minimum at the recommended 8.4, your machine will have a better chance at doing it's job in reacting to the events.
is that clear?
oh and btw. if you want to get someone's attention when you are replying, use the quote feature. there are a lot of users and a lot of posts. not everyone reads every post for many and sundry reasons.
good luck!
Machine: AirSense 11 Autoset |
Mask: ResMed AirFit N30 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Additional Comments: Newbie who loves her machine! |
that will work just fine. i believe in baby steps. this is one of the very few things pr and i disagree on. (shhh! don't tell him.) i believe that palerider hasn't had a moment of aerophagia in his life. and that's a fair kop. me? i get immense amounts of gas if i try to make too big a jump in pressure at one time.vintage wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 6:11 pm
Interesting theory that makes a lot of sense. Appreciate you sharing your insights here.
Think I'm going to crank the min up to 7, crank the max up to 20, and try some mouth taping tonight. Bonus is that I can ditch the chinstrap.
Appreciate everybody's support and ideas here - thank you palerider, zonker, and tisket.
Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ P10 Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
You'd do better with at least 8.
Ha. As I was making the changes last night the voice in my head was screaming "scientific method! change one variable, not three!"zonker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 8:47 pmthat will work just fine. i believe in baby steps. this is one of the very few things pr and i disagree on. (shhh! don't tell him.) i believe that palerider hasn't had a moment of aerophagia in his life. and that's a fair kop. me? i get immense amounts of gas if i try to make too big a jump in pressure at one time.vintage wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 6:11 pm
Interesting theory that makes a lot of sense. Appreciate you sharing your insights here.
Think I'm going to crank the min up to 7, crank the max up to 20, and try some mouth taping tonight. Bonus is that I can ditch the chinstrap.
Appreciate everybody's support and ideas here - thank you palerider, zonker, and tisket.
so take it easy. see if it works for you.
just one note of caution-please make ONE change at a time and stick with it over the course of several nights. out minds want this change instantly. our bodies however, not so much. it may take time to see a difference and feel a difference.
continued good luck!
Machine: AirSense™ 10 CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Mask: AirFit™ N20 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
People don't seem to understand that just because a machine CAN go to whatever the max is set to that it changes nothing if the machine NEVER goes near that max. The max is just there in case something special ever happens that might cause the machine to WANT to go higher for some reason or other. Setting a lower max doesn't change the machine's response when in auto adjusting mode. All it might do (when set too low) is prevent the machine from trying to go higher when it thinks it needs to go higher to hold the airway open.
Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
Additional Comments: Mask Bleep Eclipse https://bleepsleep.com/the-eclipse/ |