Miss Emerita wrote: ↑Thu Dec 21, 2023 12:33 pm
I would suggest that for the moment, you bracket the CAs, since the real problem there is probably the arousals rather than the CAs themselves. As for the hypopneas and flow limitations, I would suggest that you introduce EPR, starting with 2. This may result in more CAs (and OAs), but what will be interesting to see is whether it reduces Hs and FLs. Is that an experiment you're willing to try?
Hi Miss Emerita. Thanks a lot for your comprehensive response.
I have already tried that, and the results have indeed been exactly what you describe: almost no Hs to the expense of more CAs (see screenshot below). Do you think I should go back to those settings for the time being?
Miss Emerita wrote: ↑Thu Dec 21, 2023 12:33 pm
Your sleep test used EEG channels, so if was able to detect whether you were asleep or awake throughout the night. Thus your report probably doesn't reflect clear-airway events that occurred after brief arousals; it reflects only CAs that occurred while you were truly asleep. This means we just don't know whether you had a lot of post-arousal CAs during the night of your test.
Your sleep test also showed a number of arousals, some arising from respiratory-related conditions and some "spontaneous" (meaning they didn't arise from respiratory-related conditions).
The Oscar zoomed-in charts are mostly or entirely showing CAs that follow arousal breathing. Arousal breathing tends to be deeper and more irregular than asleep breathing. It is often followed by CAs, though the exact mechanism that accounts for this is not entirely clear.
While your PAP therapy has done a good job with OAs, you're still having a fair number of hypopneas and snores, and your flow-limitation graph is fairly active.
If all those CAs are being caused by arousals indeed, does it mean I shouldn't worry about them?
On another note, I'm starting to suspect that most events might be triggered by positional sleep apnea. Notice how there's barely any events during the first hour or so of sleep? I thought this was mainly because, from what I read, sleep apnea tends to worsen during REM sleep, and apparently deep sleep tends to make most of our sleep during the first cycle of the night. However, I'm starting to think that it might be because after an hour or so, I unconsciously turn on my back, which is the worst position for my apnea (I start the night sleeping on my left side).
One more thing. If you take a look at last night's data (graph below), I couldn't really fall back asleep from 6.00 am onwards. I was in light sleep at best, and yet look at the big number of events being displayed. I've been taping my mouth for a couple of weeks now, and during that 2-hour period (6.00 am to 8.00 am), the reason I couldn't fall asleep is because I was gasping for air through my mouth, which was completely blocked. This would happen over and over again, thus preventing me from falling asleep. This used to happen even when not taped, which would still wake me up. Interestingly, for some reason, it only seems to happen during the early morning but not during the night.
EPR 3
LAST NIGHT
