What great info people are giving you in the thread you started, Kenny! And what a good job you're doing educating yourself to get ready for good-breathing-while-sleeping!!
tattooyu wrote:I definitely noticed that I had the "puff of air" come out my mouth a few times during the study, but I did manage to keep my mouth closed most of the time. What a horribly unpleasant feeling that is when you open your mouth!
If you puffed air out your mouth a few times that you were aware of, Kenny, I'm sorry to say it's pretty likely you are going to do some mouth-breathing and/or air leaking out your mouth during the full relaxation of sleep. Maybe not, though. Maybe you'll be lucky and not do that.
There's going to be only one way to be sure, though. That "data capable" machine - which will record
leak data as well as AHI data.
If you get a ResMed machine, the leak data will be displayed most clearly. Zero is the ideal leak rate with a ResMed machine and shows up clearly in the "nightly" data in the LCD.
If you get a Respironics machine, there is no option for "nightly" data...just a running weekly/monthly average, which is next to useless info imho. I want to see just what happened last night. Not a weekly or monthly average, which can be skewed by one unusually terribly leaky night in the midst of, say, a week of better leak control. A "terrible" leak night can happen, for example, if a person is having a lot of mask problems - taking the mask off frequently to adjust and readjust, or the mask coming loose or springing a bad leak on one side while the sleeper "sleeps" through it. Anyway, you get the picture. Much better to be able to see leak data (and AHI data, for that matter) for "just last night" when any problems you had are fresh on your mind.
There's a work-around with Respironics machines, to show "just last night's data." A bit cumbersome, but it works:
How to reset the M series machine "weekly"/"monthly" details back to zero, in order to view just last night's results the next day:
viewtopic.php?p=239127#239127
viewtopic/t29141/Resetting-the-data-on-Respironics.html
With a Respironics machine, the Encore Viewer software that you can buy for yourself would give you tons of useful data... the Daily Details graph it produces lets you see all kinds of details about "last night's treatment."
The Sandman Auto also has very detailed software you can buy.
You probably have already seen this, Kenny, but for the benefit of other newer readers:
My list of machines that record "full data" (AHI and leak data) and those that don't -- as of October 2008:
viewtopic.php?p=307168#p307168
tattooyu wrote:Hopefully, the DME will allow me to try on a few masks to see which I like.
Better yet, hope that the DME will let you take a mask home to try AT HOME, all night, in your own sleeping environment. Masks can feel fine and seem to seal fine when the DME fits in on your face at their office, sitting up in a chair. They should let you lie down on a bed, couch, or cot, or on the floor, if need be. Yes, the floor, even! Take your pillow (in an old pillowcase you can throw away later) and leave your dignity at home...give the masks a
thorough workout at the DME's office! Toss and turn in all your sleeping positions right there.
Try to find a DME who will let you return mask after mask after mask during the first month. The mask will be the real key to "doing" CPAP treatment. Even more important than what machine you receive, imho. Getting a mask you can actually sleep in, without wanting to tear the thing off and throw it against the wall, is the most important item.
After you get a mask, if it suits you "almost" but not quite, check out the Lab Rat Awards link, to see modifications many have made to their masks to tweak them to perfection (or as close to that as we can get! )
LINKS to Lab Rat Trophy awards
viewtopic.php?t=15104
You might even see a modification to a mask other than yours, that can be applied to your mask in some way.
Good luck! You're going in there well armed! What a shock to the DME. Most of them aren't used to hearing sheep/cattle talk. Actually, there
are some good'uns out there who appreciate a pro-active, well informed customer. Hope you draw one like that!