Re: No Rhyme or Reason to Numbers
Posted: Tue Aug 11, 2009 10:28 am
DSM, Can you give an explanation for this ? I've never quite understood the secret of Auto vs Cpap except that my husband does much better on straight cpap also.
Wulfman (Den) has often said he found that autopaps' varying pressures seem to disturb his sleep.DoriC wrote:Can you give an explanation for this ? I've never quite understood the secret of Auto vs Cpap except that my husband does much better on straight cpap also.
Yay me!!!spookydoo wrote:Well I took Cajun's advice and moved it from APAP to straight CPAP AND I lowered the pressure from 14 to 11. Voila! My AHI went down to 3.0. I also didn't wake up dizzy like normal. I'm losing weight, so hopefully I'll be able to lower the pressure even more in the future.
What you say is also interesting. When I asked my sleep doc if I should try CPAP since my sleep tech said, "You sure are sensitive to slight pressure changes! You woke each time I bumped it up." he told me "You have an APAP capable machine. Most people do better on it, so you should as well." Thank God for this site.spookydoo wrote:Interesting. My Neurologist/Sleep Doctor said that they prefer straight CPAP at Vanderbilt Medical Center. I find it interesting that not only have I gotten my best numbers to date by using straight CPAP instead of APAP (as I was doing), but I also lowered my pressure and got much better results.
RG, I think I've got it(maybe ) So on auto at 11-13, if one is sensitive to pressure changes or is in whatever stage of sleep and sleeping comfortably at 11 but suddenly needs the 12 or 13 because of an event, that change might disrupt sleep, cause restlessness,therefore maybe a leak,etc. I think that is what happens to Mike on auto. Last night I changed back to cpap at 12.5cms and his AHI was 0.3 with a nice straight leak line. On auto he also has a low AHI but he has leaks and doesn't feel as rested. Another issue is that he does fine at 12 or 12.5 but the few times I've tried 13 he complains about the pressure? Thanks as always for answering my questions.rested gal wrote:For example, say it takes a pressure of 10 to keep a person's airway well and truly open all night. And say that that person is ultra sensitive to slight changes in pressure while sleeping. Even with a narrow autopap range of 8 - 10, the slight up and down changes between that minumum pressure of 8 and maximum pressure of 10 on autopap might disrupt some peoples' sleep, continually knocking them out of whatever stage of sleep they happened to be in when pressure changes happened. But, the same person might sleep fine if the autopap was switched to CPAP mode at a steady pressure of 10.DoriC wrote:Can you give an explanation for this ? I've never quite understood the secret of Auto vs Cpap except that my husband does much better on straight cpap also.
Cajun, I can top that! At our first visit the Dr set the auto to 8-18(I remember now that he used hubby's titration of 13 as his guideline). I had already been on this forum for a few weeks and read about "sleep specialists" and was starting to get help from the pros about settings,etc, so I already knew what his answer was going to be, "that's why you have an auto machine, it will find the correct pressure". This forum has been the only reason we kept on going. BTW, I seem to think we've had a similar discussion about this before, I may be wrong.cajun wrote:What you say is also interesting. When I asked my sleep doc if I should try CPAP since my sleep tech said, "You sure are sensitive to slight pressure changes! You woke each time I bumped it up." he told me "You have an APAP capable machine. Most people do better on it, so you should as well." Thank God for this site.spookydoo wrote:Interesting. My Neurologist/Sleep Doctor said that they prefer straight CPAP at Vanderbilt Medical Center. I find it interesting that not only have I gotten my best numbers to date by using straight CPAP instead of APAP (as I was doing), but I also lowered my pressure and got much better results.