You know how I feel about these disagreements. Respironics may have to rework their wording since they clearly state their BiPAP autoSV will automatically trigger a breath for a central apneic event (singular). Respironics never mentions anything about that machine's backup rate being reserved for multiples, cycles, or sequences of central apneas. They address periodicity patterns with fluctuating PS. But they never explicitly or implicitly claim to refrain from backing up singular central apneas with their backup rate.Muffy wrote:I disagree with your disagreement. The CompSAS cycle is perpetuated by overshoot, so the key is not how it blows through the CA, but how pressure support drops back during the hyperventilatory period immediately after. That is the critical area. If this were not the case, then simple BiPAP with a backup rate would be successful in treating CompSAS and there would be no need for ASV.
Further, singular (or more specifically, isolated) central apneas are nearly always benign, and should be left alone.
Muffy
They even use a singular central-apnea case in their description of administering backup rate:
http://bipapautosv.respironics.com/how.aspxthe BiPAP autoSV algorithm also calculates the patient's spontaneous breathing rate and will automatically trigger a breath should the patient have a central apneic event.
So if the BiPAP autoSV refrains from administering its backup rate to singular central apnea events, I can't find that anywhere in literature. But I can find statements like the above describing "a central apneic event" (singular) receiving that algorithm's backup rate.