Muse,
You've done a really good job at explaining just how
severe apnea with desats can and does cause damage and symptoms.
And I've no doubt that if my apnea were left untreated, it would only be a matter of time before I started having problems with things like you describe:
PSG: AHI=62, all hypops, 1.15 mins of Stage 3 sleep & no REM all Stages 1 & 2, no abnormal heart rhythms, no limb movements, desatted to 83% (not all that low ). But, at the time my BP had risen to 215/110 from my family's usual low BP something like 65-70/60. I pee'd typically 8-10 times/night. I'm sure I had brain lesions like all severe apneics who've had brain scans at diagnosis as I had the typical cognitive & memory deficits of many with untreated severe apnea.
But what you are describing here is not quite what I'm asking about: You were having desats that were NOT minor/negligable in size; you clearly were already suffering from physical damage caused by the sleep apnea; and you were clearly symptomatic. So your CPAP is clearly acting in a way to
treat the damage that has already been caused by the apnea as well as
treat the symptoms of those problems. Hence, it's easy to see that you would notice a big positive difference in how you feel since starting CPAP.
In my case, there were no desats lower than 91%. I got into REM in both studies---the % of time in REM was a bit less in the diagnostic study, but then again, I slept a whole hour less in that study than I did in the titration study. [It may well have been the apnea OR it may have been that the diagnostic study was done in a hot room in which I could hear the traffic outside, while the titration study was done in a cool room with no traffic noise. I'm personally inclined to think both things contributed to less sleep in the diagnostic study.]
Stage 3 sleep is another issue altogether: Stage 3 was present during my diagnostic sleep study, but was completely absent from the study done with a CPAP machine. And I've had many nights in the last 6 weeks where I've woke up wondering whether I'm still not getting into Stage 3. That might explain why I'm still feeling so
sleepy during the daytime and so
exhausted all the time.
BP: Well, my (daytime) BP a week after my diagnostic was still a nice 105/65. Nightime pressure? Well I suppose it could be higher, but I don't know. Certainly there was nothing in the sleep study that indicated any problems with night time BP.
Night time peeing (nocturnia): Not for me---I've never had any excess need to go to the bathroom at night. Before CPAP, I'd wake up needing to go the bathroom maybe once
a month or so. I know that this is a common symptom. And you've given me good insight into why it's an important symptom and how the untreated apneic episodes lead to this. So in my case, I assume that if I am diligent and continue to use my CPAP every night (like I intend to), then I should
never develop this symptom and the underlying BP problem that causes it since
I currently do not have this symptom nor (to the best of my knowledge) the underlying BP problem that causes it. In that case, my CPAP is acting prophylactically---it is
preventing a problem from developing rather than
treating an existing problem. Clearly a good thing. But I really can't expect CPAP to reduce my "frequent need to pee at night" since I don't have any need to go pee at night.
Cognitive and memory problems: Before CPAP I had (by far) the best memory in my family. And in my extended family. And among my friends and coworkers. Really---people would comment on just how freaky good my memory was---both short term and long term. Now since starting CPAP I feel like I'm wandering around in a fog all the time. I can't remember my day-to-day schedule even with trying to remember writing everything down. My already not great spelling has become really horrible. [Google is great for helping me figure out how to spell words that the posting editor flags---if I notice the little red line under the word.] And the fog started during my first week of CPAP. It's starting to lift (I think), but my mind is not working normally now. I seem to be having frequent problems with losing words when I talk with my husband. That was not happening this summer just prior to my starting CPAP. And since the S9 is reporting good AHI almost all the time (most typically between 0.5 and 1.5), I don't think my new cognitive and memory problems are (directly) due to my apnea. But since they started right at the time I started using the S9, it's not unreasonable to assume that somehow CPAP itself is causing them, although what the mechanism would be is beyond me.
You also write:
Another effect of 5 yrs of untreated apnea...ta da, are ya ready for it...diabetes. And most type 2 diabetics have apnea. Apparently apnea activates diabetes genes...lovely huh?
Again, I've no doubt that if left untreated that apnea can lead to type 2 diabetes. But I am not diabetic now. (Yes, I know this to be true---I had a physical exam in July that included a routine fasting test for blood sugar; it was normal.) So here again, at best my CPAP will decrease the chances that I develop type II diabetes as I age and that's again a prophylactic treatment that isn't going to change how I feel today. [And age of onset of type II diabetes in my family ranges from early 80's to never.] So again, this is a great reason for me to keep using my CPAP machine, but that doesn't mean that my CPAP is actually helping my body undo damage that is not yet there.
So I come full circle:
Is the main reason that a person like me---with moderate apnea and NO desats to speak up and completely asymptomatic---is told to use CPAP for the rest of my life prophylactic? In other words, is the main benefit of using CPAP to a person like me preventative---i.e. as a treatment to minimize the chances that I will eventually develop a whole host of serious physical problems that untreated apnea may/will cause farther down the line in say a 5 or 10 year time frame?
Or is there a therapeutic aspect to CPAP for my body right now in the present even though I don't have any evidence of the kinds of physical damage you are talking about right now?
Now don't get me wrong: I know I'm lucky that I've been diagnosed apparently before the apnea has started to take a physical toll on my body. And if that means that CPAP is mainly prophylactic, that clearly doesn't mean it's worthless. After all, if CPAP can
prevent me from developing so many of the symptoms and physical problems so many of the posters regularly talk about as having been caused by or aggravated by apnea, then that's a real good reason for sticking with CPAP.
But I do wish someone could explain to me why I'm feeling so much worse since starting CPAP.