Re: Why doesn't APAP respond to apneas?
Posted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 11:06 pm
Thanks, Rested Gal!
OK, and what about you, -SWS who never needed IFL1 turned off: is that a baquet hall or a dancing hall on your chart?
O.
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then it says below the fancy dancy graph in the center:The Science of Finding the Right Pressure.
At the core of the REMstar Auto’s ability to adjust to a patient’s pressure needs is a “multi-level” algorithm.
Working primarily by measuring instances of flow limitation, the REMstar Auto utilizes systematic, subtle
changes in pressure and assesses the impact of these changes on the patient’s breathing patterns. These proactive
changes in pressure and assessment of flow limitation are continually searching for the best possible
pressure level for the patient. Supporting this primary analysis are secondary analysis parameters devoted to
detecting major respiratory events and responding appropriately. These secondary analysis parameters
determine necessary levels of responseto eliminate events and position the patient with a more appropriate
pressure level. Additional levels of analysis are devoted to elevated – or “big leak” – levels and variable breathing.
Note: It measures these values as pressure drops after stepping over the chair, ole split_city would like this, they monitor for these right where he showed they occurredThroughout the night the Proactive Algorithm of the REMstar Auto subtly searches for the best pressure level for a
patient’s needs by cycling through the Pcrit, Popt and Ptherapy modes. Pcrit determines the critical pressure where
the airway begins to collapse. Popt determines the optimal pressure level for a stable airway. Ptherapy provides an
extended period of constant pressure at the ideal level.
I see no extended period of constant pressure at the ideal level in Bev's APAP chart.Snoredog, quoting the Remstar Auto Brochure (page 3 of 6), wrote: <snip>Ptherapy provides an extended period of constant pressure at the ideal level.
According to Respironics that routine search for Pcrit always starts at the previous Pther value. And Pther is nothing more than whatever therapeutic pressure happened to be sustained pending the results of the previous pressure probe or responsive pressure routine. Respironics describes the probe for Pcrit as always being a downward pressure search. It's not even algorithmically possible to search downward for Pcrit when the machine already happens to be at the minimum pressure prescribed by a pressure range.ozij wrote:Do you assume a search for Pcrit to start at minimum pressure? I wouldn't.
I pulled your Wednesday point out because I think it is correct and central to what is happening on Bev's charts and the charts of several other posters. Rested Gal's up-and-down Encore Pro "pressure chairs" as well as her 420e FL over scoring hint at two manufacturers' interpretations of the same less-than-frank precursor signs of FL----the same probability-based interpretation/misinterpretation of the same subtle FL probability component(s) embedded in the flow signal. What would the FL detection specificity be for any of those constituent probability-based wave components when an insufficient subset occurs? Mediocre at best I would suspect, since the algorithm doesn't even have enough probability-based flow signal components to even score an individual frank FL event!ozij wrote:Once again, agreed, and this is what I tried to say about the algorithm's response in my posts from Wednesday.-SWS wrote: So the algorithm doesn't score FL, for lack of all the other probability components of frank FL scoring criteria. But it decides that it needs to pressure probe upward until that flow wobble goes away. And by, golly, pressure goes up and up quite a ways before that flow-amplitude wobble spontaneously subsides. In general it would be possible for the algorithm to commence that same upward search routine for any subset of probability-based FL precursors---not just the amplitude parameter. That means slight obstruction or transluminal airway collapse (as opposed to respiratory controller oscillation) is a more likely case across the obstructive patient population.
There's no basis to expect that Pther must be maintained for any extended period of time. Pther is nothing more than "the new therapeutic pressure that has been determined after a probe". That Pther is simply the new therapeutic pressure value that would result after either: 1) the scheduled Pcrit/Popt/Pther probe or 2) a responsive Popt/Pther probe---meaning a non-scheduled probe resulting from just a spontaneous and preliminary hint of FL, or 3) a therapeutic pressure value previously determined by a higher-priority control layer in the algorithm.ozij wrote:I see no extended period of constant pressure at the ideal level in Bev's APAP chart.Snoredog, quoting the Remstar Auto Brochure (page 3 of 6), wrote: <snip>Ptherapy provides an extended period of constant pressure at the ideal level.
Bookmark placed... I need to find my old data amidst an assortment of hard drives and computers. Recall that I was off CPAP for more than a year because of trigeminal neuralgia.ozij wrote:OK, and what about you, -SWS who never needed IFL1 turned off: is that a baquet hall or a dancing hall on your chart?
Well, that so called marketing text happens to display the same graph as you put up only in color. It matches perfectly as to what is happening during low activity periods on Bev's charts. There is NO apnea or hypopnea taking place to trigger the A/H controller to take control over that circuit, there may be variable breathing happening causing the Variable Breathing controller to look at it, but we cannot see that happening on a Encore report. There is no event, not even snore for the snore controller to to take control.-SWS wrote: Snoredog, don't dance so much on the illusory surface of logic when it comes to marketing text---that superficial surface of text where manufacturers necessarily dance in communication with a public comprised of people who are generally unfamiliar with the science and technology behind their products... I have yet to see anything definitive in your argument to preclude those pressure chairs from occurring exactly as ozij and I describe. Nada! Zip! Zilch!
Ah, don't take it personal... ozij and I are just heading in the wrong and opposite direction with the rest of science...Snoredog wrote:But you and ozi keep searching for it, you'll find it one day.
Search for a lower optimal pressure from APAP's min pressure? I think we'll have to politely agree to disagree on this point my friend. Don't take it personal.Snoredog wrote:So during those periods of no activity the machine probes for a more optimal lower pressure, it does that by increasing pressure...
Well then increase pressure to 15 and completely mask it, because that is what it will do. It is bouncing along the Minimum pressure and for this circuit to work it has to increase pressure and monitor what happens from that increase on the down side. It is only moving up by a total of 2 cm. Total working range is only 14 to 17, it needs at least 2 cm for that circuit to work, mask it out and you might as well put it in straight CPAP mode at 15 so you see a straight line across the report and cannot see what is happening. What residual apnea events seen on that report are probably central, that is if the machine was smart enough to determine that, and it is not.-SWS wrote:Ah, don't take it personal... ozij and I are just heading in the wrong and opposite direction with the rest of science...ozij wrote:But you and ozi keep searching for it, you'll find it one day.
Search for a lower optimal pressure from APAP's min pressure? I think we'll have to politely agree to disagree on this point my friend. Don't take it personal.Snoredog wrote:So during those periods of no activity the machine probes for a more optimal lower pressure, it does that by increasing pressure...
Symptomatically something is very broke---it may or may not be related to xPAP therapy.but hey if it ain't broke let's fix it anyway
Bev is tired and having long apnea that concern her. We were trying to find clues in her data for that.but hey if it ain't broke let's fix it anyway.
Well what about the lab report? Appears they couldn't keep those cortical arousals at bay in the lab setting for very long either, they only tested her from 12/8 to 25/21 and still came to no clear conclusion. So what pressure combination produced the lowest RDI and fewest cortical arousals? Let's look at the lab report;-SWS wrote:Symptomatically something is very broke---it may or may not be related to xPAP therapy.but hey if it ain't broke let's fix it anyway
And what might the measurement specificity and sensitivity be for FL or even hypopnea on single-channel flow-sensor based APAP machines? Far less than perfect, which is tantamount to being therapeutically broke for many patients.
And what might the sensitivity and specificity be for machine-related excessive cortical arousals? Exactly a big fat broken zero in all cases, meaning we can never be certain when xPAP therapy is or isn't broken..
Don't forget Variable Breathing has a control circuit, while it doesn't report VB on Encore reports, it does if you use James Skinners' program against the database.-SWS wrote:...Any chart that has little or no VS/FL/H/A activity going on should theoretically have those "pressure chairs" if those were routine and scheduled...