Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
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Songbird
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by Songbird » Sun Oct 19, 2008 3:04 pm

OutaSync wrote:I guess I've been called worse things than a bifurcated dysregulated breather!
You were..... by Jeff/jnk..... in this very thread..... on page 8.
Hmmmmm..... sounds a little like Colonel Mustard in the Conservatory with the Lead Pipe.


Seriously, Bev, it's clear that your sense of humor is surviving this latest chapter well and that you're doing a great job of "keeping on." Many would have given up loooooong ago. Hang in there, lady, you're an inspiration to all of us.

Marsha
Last edited by Songbird on Fri Oct 24, 2008 2:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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dsm
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by dsm » Sun Oct 19, 2008 3:34 pm

-SWS wrote:
So SWS, does the SV protocol consider those HI's seen on Bev's report as "obstructive" events? ...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume? I could believe that, but I don't think its the case.
Right. The SV machines don't differentiate obstructive from central in any way. By design they are all about targeting an averaged flow peak or minute volume. A detected hypopnea is always undifferentiated, as is any detected apnea.

So both "Big R" manufacturers want the obstructive component manually addressed with the machine's fixed pressure component.
Steve,

Seeking some clarification - are you saying 'right' to the poster in that the HIs are regarded as 'obstructive' (I take that to mean AI the way the poster wrote it ("...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume?")).

If yes then that contradicts the purpose of IpapMin which is to eliminate hypopneas (according to titration guide) ?

Epap targets obstructive apneas
IpapMin targets hypopneas & flow lims
IpapMax targets av peak flow & centrals via BPM rate regulation

The titration guide is pretty clear on this ?

Cheers

DSM
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by rested gal » Sun Oct 19, 2008 3:39 pm

Songbird wrote:
OutaSync wrote:I guess I've been called worse things than a bifurcated dysregulated breather!
You were..... by Jeff/jnk..... in this very thread..... on page 8.
Hmmmmm..... sounds a little like Professor Mustard in the Conservatory with the Lead Pipe.
omg, I'd forgotten about what jeff said, in good fun. LOL!!
heheh, our whole family (avid game players) did love the game Clue. Ought to dust it off and take it to the family gathering next month. A blast from the past.
Songbird wrote:Seriously, Bev, it's clear that your sense of humor is surviving this latest chapter well and that you're doing a great job of "keeping on." Many would have given up loooooong ago. Hang in there, lady, you're an inspiration to all of us.

Marsha
That's the truth! And in the midst of it all, Bev regularly posts words of encouragement to others who are starting down the cpap path. An inspiration, indeed!
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by dsm » Sun Oct 19, 2008 3:47 pm

to help clarify

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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by rested gal » Sun Oct 19, 2008 4:16 pm

Snoredog wrote:So SWS, does the SV protocol consider those HI's seen on Bev's report as "obstructive" events? ...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume? I could believe that, but I don't think its the case.
-SWS's answer:
-SWS wrote:Right. The SV machines don't differentiate obstructive from central in any way. By design they are all about targeting an averaged flow peak or minute volume. A detected hypopnea is always undifferentiated, as is any detected apnea.

So both "Big R" manufacturers want the obstructive component manually addressed with the machine's fixed pressure component.

dsm then asked:
-dsm wrote:Steve,

Seeking some clarification - are you saying 'right' to the poster in that the HIs are regarded as 'obstructive'
Looked to me like that was what -SWS said...that the machine does not attempt to decide whether an hypopnea or an apnea is obstructive vs central.

dsm wrote: ("...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume?")).

If yes then that contradicts the purpose of IpapMin which is to eliminate hypopneas (according to titration guide) ?

Epap targets obstructive apneas
IpapMin targets hypopneas & flow lims
IpapMax targets av peak flow & centrals via BPM rate regulation

The titration guide is pretty clear on this ?

Cheers

DSM
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding, dsm, but I don't see a contradiction with the titration guide, in -SWS's answer to Snoredog's question:
-SWS wrote:So both "Big R" manufacturers want the obstructive component manually addressed with the machine's fixed pressure component.
I take that as meaning manually addressing apneas with EPAP, and hypopneas with the min IPAP...both of which are set to deal with their respective jobs...the EPAP pressure setting ideally preventing apneas, and the min IPAP setting ideally preventing hypopneas. After those manual settings are in place, the IPAP is allowed to range as much up and down as needed (up to the IPAP max and down to the IPAP min) and do that as quickly as needed (by virtue of being an SV machine) to handle what may be centrals.

I may not be expressing it clearly, and I could very well be misunderstanding either your question or how the machine works...or both!... but I don't see a contradiction there in -SWS's explanation.
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by dsm » Sun Oct 19, 2008 4:24 pm

Rested Gal,

Perhaps SWS can clarify ... this is what the poster posted ...

"So SWS, does the SV protocol consider those HI's seen on Bev's report as "obstructive" events? ...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume? I could believe that, but I don't think its the case."

SWS said Right! but I would have thought he would say Wrong!.

D
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by -SWS » Sun Oct 19, 2008 4:48 pm

dsm wrote:
-SWS wrote:
So SWS, does the SV protocol consider those HI's seen on Bev's report as "obstructive" events? ...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume? I could believe that, but I don't think its the case.
Right. The SV machines don't differentiate obstructive from central in any way. By design they are all about targeting an averaged flow peak or minute volume. A detected hypopnea is always undifferentiated, as is any detected apnea.

So both "Big R" manufacturers want the obstructive component manually addressed with the machine's fixed pressure component.
Steve,

Seeking some clarification - are you saying 'right' to the poster in that the HIs are regarded as 'obstructive' (I take that to mean AI the way the poster wrote it ("...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume?")).
Doug, I specifically meant to say that any residual hypopnea is undifferentiated. That residual hypopnea might be obstructive or that residual hypopnea might be central.

Respironics wants the obstructive component manually addressed by the clinician with the machine's fixed pressure component. With the Respironics AutoSV that means one of two cases: 1) obstructive apneas, obstructive hypopneas, and FL all addressed by CPAP (with fluctuating IPAP peak to address central issues), or 2) obstructive apneas addressed by EPAP, and obstructive hypopneas + FL addressed by IPAP min (again with fluctuating IPAP peak to address central issues). As with any fixed BiLevel titration some lesser obstructive events are likely to get addressed by that lower EPAP pressure.

So in those view graphs, here's how Respironics summarizes the above:

1) THE OBSTRUCTIVE COMPONENT: "BiPAP autoSV treats the obstructive component of SDB with a clinician adjustable CPAP or BiPAP pressure" (here the obstructive component gets manually adressed by either CPAP or EPAP/IPAP min)

2) THE CENTRAL COMPONENT OF SDB: "BiPAP autoSV treats the central component of SDB with a timed backup rate (automatic or fixed)" (here a central apnea will trigger a timed EPAP-to-IPAP pressure delivery transition---that's standard BiLevel backup occurring to responsively treat a missing breath)

3) THE PERIODIC BREATHING: "BiPAP autoSV treats the Periodic Breathing by: Normalizing ventilation by AUTOmatically adjusting Servo Ventilation (pressure support)" (here periodic breathing is countered with IPAP peak's per-breath pressure fluctuation between the set boundaries of IPAP min and IPAP max---that pressure response will actually prevent some central apneas and hypopneas that are associated with respiratory controller overshoot/undershoot)

So both "Big R" SV manufacturers ask that clinicians manually titrate away just as much of the obstructive component as possible so that fluctuating IPAP can address respiratory controller problems. Regardless, when a residual obstructive apnea or obstructive hypopnea does occur, the SV machines cannot differentiate that residual sleep event. The SV machines then treat that undifferentiated apnea or hypopnea identically---regardless of being obstructive or central.

Specifically the fluctuating IPAP peak pressures (between the values of IPAP min and IPAP max) are supposed to be reserved for highly dynamic treatment of respiratory controller oscillations. So let's assume that a patient needs to have their respiratory controller oscillations counteracted with varying IPAP peak pressures. The calculated IPAP peak values to counter that central dysregulation are going to be entirely different pressure values in physics/biophysics than the IPAP peak values required to physically stent obstructions of identical under-target flow values. Oooops! If we have too many obstructive events not manually addressed by the machine's CPAP or EPAP/IPAP-min values, we've got a big problem calculating the necessray IPAP peak values per breath. Don't we? We have the concurrence of two sets of SDB event types, each requiring different pressure values to offset identical under-target flow values.

The algorithm can calculate flow targets efficiently when you're throwing almost exclusively all apples (central events) at the target pressure/flow calculations. And the algorithm can probably even calculate flow targets efficiently when you're throwing almost exclusively all oranges (obstructive events) at the target pressure/flow calculations. But, by God, throw a 25/75 or 33/66 mix of apples and oranges at that algorithm, and how is it going to know the required work in physics to offset a heavier obstructive event compared to a somewhat lighter central event----both dissimilar events having the same exact under-target flow measurement?

Do you see why the manufacturers want as many of the obstructive events manually addressed and out of the way so that low-flow targets are purely central and thus homogeneous as far as those pressure/flow target calculations are based?

--------------------------------------------------

Snoredog, you have a handful of assumptions in your recommendations to Bev that I disagree with. I'll try to post my thoughts later, my good friend.
Last edited by -SWS on Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by Snoredog » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:01 pm

dsm wrote:Rested Gal,

Perhaps SWS can clarify ... this is what the poster posted ...

"So SWS, does the SV protocol consider those HI's seen on Bev's report as "obstructive" events? ...meaning do they want EPAP to also completely eliminate those? and IPAP then only targets peak flows and tidal volume? I could believe that, but I don't think its the case."

SWS said Right! but I would have thought he would say Wrong!.

D
Logic says what SWS indicated is correct, but the documentation doesn't support that finding, so I would have to agree, but the IPAP Max bumping into the ceiling says otherwise.

Protocol for SV says:

-Observe for Obstructive Apnea: Yes/No (note: it specifically says Obstructive Apnea as opposed to "component").

In Bev's, latest report shows NO zero zippo Obstructive Apnea.

If No, observe for Hypopnea or Periodic breathing: Yes/No?

Yes, BOTH are seen so it says:

-IF consistently at IPAP Max, increase IPAP Max by 2 cm(I'd say that is Bev's case in the latest report).
-Next it says IF this does NOT eliminate the events, set BPM rate 2 less than Spontaneous BPM rate (i.e. calling for fixed settings, no more backup=Auto, I would call her Spontaneous BPM at 11.6 or 12 BPM, rounded up 2 less would be BPM=10, I'll be dipped there it is again).
-Start Inspiration Time at a "minimum" of 1.2 seconds, she could be longer just no shorter than 1.2 seconds.

However, what SWS says may have some merit:
logic says if IPAP is running higher than you like to see, you bump up EPAP a tiny bit (like 9.5 cm) and IPAP shouldn't be pegging at the Max (protocol seems to think that bumping at the IPAP Max is okay, just move IPAP Max higher, she IS under the 10 cm delta they suggest in the protocol). But at this point I believe we are looking for greater pressure support (moving cautiously I might add). I don't like the Periodic Breathing seen and drop in Patient initiated breathing seen despite her report of feeling better, that feeling better may be from just getting used to breathing against this new modality.

At this point, I think she has to move IPAP Max up at least to 19 cm. At this point you don't want anything limiting the SV algorithm's movement in my opinion.
Last edited by Snoredog on Sun Oct 19, 2008 6:09 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by dsm » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:08 pm

Steve,
Thanks - I can now see that there was an unintended ambiguity in the 'right' response to the point made by that poster.
The way it came across was that you had said 'right' that hypopneas needed to be treated by epap which you have clarified
very well in the above post.

The SV machine is one of Respironic's specialist machines for CSR (which is what you just said as well but in different words).

Cheers

DSM
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by Snoredog » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:10 pm

-SWS wrote: Snoredog, you have a handful of assumptions in your recommendations to Bev that I disagree with. I'll try to post my thoughts later, my good friend.
you WILL have to explain it, because I think DSM is seeing the same thing as I am.
someday science will catch up to what I'm saying...

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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by -SWS » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:11 pm

I'll post specific comments about Snoredog's recommendations later this evening. But first I would like to flag Snoredog's recommendations for any IPAP-max minus EPAP value that exceeds Respironics and consensus medicine's maximum recommendation of 10 cm:
This year's AASM PAP titration clinical guideline wrote: 4.3.1.6 The recommended minimum IPAP-EPAP differential is 4 cm H2O and the maximum IPAP-EPAP differential is 10 cm H2O (Consensus).
Respironics FAQ observes that 10 cm limit as well. So on what basis can we recommend Bev exceeding that IPAP-EPAP maximum recommended gap of 10 cm, Snoredog? The titration sheet is not supposed to supersede consensus titration protocol.

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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by dsm » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:13 pm

Snoredog

I am sure Bev is being stressed by this exercise & her headache looks like a warning signal.

I am happy to let SWS be the sole guide for what adjustments Bev should make as if too many suggestions are put forward
that headache may get worse (adding to Bev's stress).

Your picks have been pretty good as regards aspects of the use of the SV. But Bev really needs some stability of settings &
where she is now can be left for a night or so to allow her to settle.

Cheers

DSM
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by dsm » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:20 pm

I am happy this is what SWS was pointing out in his post above re PS & cyclic or irregular breathing ...

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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by Snoredog » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:25 pm

-SWS wrote:I'll post specific comments about Snoredog's recommendations later this evening. But first I would like to flag Snoredog's recommendations for any IPAP-max minus EPAP value that exceeds Respironics and consensus medicine's maximum recommendation of 10 cm:
This year's AASM PAP titration clinical guideline wrote: 4.3.1.6 The recommended minimum IPAP-EPAP differential is 4 cm H2O and the maximum IPAP-EPAP differential is 10 cm H2O (Consensus).
Respironics FAQ observes that 10 cm limit as well. So on what basis can we recommend Bev exceeding that IPAP-EPAP maximum recommended gap of 10 cm, Snoredog? The titration sheet is not supposed to supersede consensus titration protocol.
I don't understand what you are saying here.

I first asked did the SV protocol intend for EPAP to completely eliminate ALL obstructive events? I didn't ask about differentiating events, I know it can't tell the difference, I've said that all along for years now. But even at 14 cm on her Aflex machine it did NOT totally eliminate all Hypopnea seen, knowing a bit of her history (from lab reports presented here) I'd say those residual Hypopnea seen when her min was at 14 cm was probably central components.

Maybe the SV titration guide needs some fine tuning (and I think it does) but I would never suggest anyone increase PS beyond 10 cm. Last night she was below that limit as her IPAP Max was at 18, and the result was IPAP max bumping into that ceiling.

I don't like IPAP working pressure bumping into that ceiling and like it even less when I see Periodic Breathing introduced.

SINCE the Maximum EPAP to IPAP ratio of 10 cm should NEVER be exceeded, we have to toss out the protocol for time being and prevent that from happening by increasing EPAP (which in turn reduces the need for a higher IPAP). We also want a Minimum IPAP-EPAP differential of 4 cm.

So if EPAP=9.0
and you are wanting to maintain a "minimum" IPAP-EPAP differential of 4 cm, you would have to set IPAP Min to:

IPAP Min=13 cm (EPAP +4)

And since you should NEVER exceed 10 cm IPAP-EPAP differential of 10 cm, you would have to set IPAP Max to:

IPAP Max= (EPAP +10 cm) or 19 cm.

This sorta goes against your 2-3 cm suggestion earlier my friend.
Last edited by Snoredog on Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?

Post by sbouchet » Sun Oct 19, 2008 5:40 pm

I would go for a new sleep study. Your pressure setting is higher than my morbidly obese father. Find a hospital based sleep clinic that does a full night titration study, rather than waking you in the middle and fitting you with a cpap.