SleepingUgly wrote:Patrissimo, first comment: IMO, you are putting too much stock in the data from these machines. Think about this well know piece of information: The previous version of the Resmed S9 scored tons of hypopneas, way more than the S9 does. If someone upgraded from the S8 to an S9, did their SDB suddenly worsen overnight? No, the algorithm changed. From one machine to the next, the data is different. I've been on Respironics CPAP and APAP, Resmed CPAP and APAP, Resmed bilevel and Auto-bilevel, and now Resmed ASV. They don't even score FLs the same, even within the same brand. This isn't a sleep study (which would also yield different results from night to night and lab to lab). .
I'm a bit confused. The paper I was referring to ("Adaptive Pressure Support Servoventilation: a Novel Treatment for Sleep Apnea Associated with Use of Opioids") used PSGs to get the result that
ASV decreased OAs more than CPAP did. I think
all of the papers were based on PSGs, not on data from the machines. Where was I referring to data from the machines?
SleepingUgly wrote:Quite honestly, I'm not reading carefully this big debate about statistics and I'm not interested enough in all this to wade through those articles, checking out sample sizes, power analyses, etc. If you want to try ASV, try ASV. I sincerely doubt that -SWS would try to talk you out of it, particularly if you've exhausted your other options. So you probably don't need to work so hard to try to convince him that ASV is a modality worth trying for someone who has tried everything else...
Oh, definitely. I'm going to try
ASV based on my own experiments and opinion. I've never been one to care much about other people approving my ideas. But I'd love to have more data to guide my decision, and I was hoping to get some here. I would also like others to have good data to make their own personal decisions. It doesn't serve anyone to have erroneously pro-
ASV opinions or erroneously anti-
ASV opinions. I believe strongly that people are best served by the truth.
SleepingUgly wrote:A piece of advice from someone who's been around here a lot longer than you have (and whose FLs are worse than yours, if that impresses you ):
You're obviously very bright and trying hard to catch up reading all the stuff that I would have expected a guy as bright as you to have read BEFORE subjecting himself to invasive surgery. Whatever it is you know, however, is a drop in the bucket compared to what some of the people here know, especially -SWS and Mollete. So you can spend your time in a big debate about statistical significance and try to teach them something about the null hypothesis (and show off your statistical prowess) OR you can let them teach you and maybe, just maybe, make a dent in your EDS.
Yes, I should have read more (and tried xPAP more) before surgery. I had an irrational desire to find a permanent solution that wouldn't require
all the tinkering and annoyance of CPAP. And I believed Dr. Li's 90% claim for MMA.
I'm not trying to show off my statistical prowess - I'm not even a statistician, I've only taken one stats class, I've just worked with statisticians enough to know the basics. I don't think I'm any kind of a stats whiz, I'm a first-grader compared to lots of people I know. But I don't understand how I can learn from someone who says "A is false because of B" when B does not actually disprove A at
all. I'm here trying to learn, and trying to listen, but when we're arguing whether the guy who batted 0.320 last year is more likely to bat higher than the guy who batted 0.275, or more likely to bat lower, and someone says "Well, they are going to face some different pitchers this year, in a different order, with different weather" I don't how to learn from that, or do anything other than say "Huh?"
I would love to read anything that anyone has to say about addressing my EDS. That's why I posted my health history & sleepyhead data threads. I would especially love to hear from anyone who has successfully treated the situation I'm in - Mild AHI, significant FLs according to the machine, feel slightly better on CPAP, but still wake up 3-8x/night w/ nocturia (strong sign of untreated SDB), and feel unrefreshed and awful, have had tests on hormones and iron and
all that stuff to look for other causes, and suspect that they are unusually sensitive to even mild SDB. The only doctor who claims to have a cure for this population is Dr. Krakow, and the only model that fits it is the "UARS as hypersensitive response to mild flow limitations" model. I would love to have other models and other doctors to read, and especially other patients to talk to who have been in the same situation and fixed it.