Re: Another approach to Provent
Posted: Thu May 17, 2012 5:00 pm
Maybe they have to sign a promise that they won't.
I plan to do it once I'm through the basic getting used to Provent.Gerald? wrote:I keep hoping to check in and see some people with oximeter readings comparing nights on Provent to nights on CPAP, but no joy.
Just wondering if any of the Provent users have done this?
No, I didn't sign anything to get my Provent supply.chunkyfrog wrote:Maybe they have to sign a promise that they won't.
I am a Provent beginner, so it is presumptuous of me to offer you advice, but we Provent-users need to exchange all the ideas we can.SleepingUgly wrote:Well, the short story is that I can fall asleep with it, but I can't stay asleep with it. I wake up and my mouth is dry, my nose feels dry and stuffy (even though I don't think it really is stuffy) and I have the sensation that I'm having trouble breathing. I fall in and out of sleep, getting terrible sleep, until I quit. Last night I tried it with a touch of Ambien and a chinstrap, but still woke up at 3:45am with the same scenario.
You lose then, since it's already been done.-tim wrote:I'm betting every cpap company's engineers would like data on that.
This should go on your original post, with a link to the present one, if you prefer posting here.SleepingUgly wrote:I just saw this new thread about Provent and don't have time to read it all right now. Is anyone here using Provent successfully and can give me advice? I had a thread going, but don't know if I should continue to post there, and maybe put a link here, or post here...
Well, the short story is that I can fall asleep with it, but I can't stay asleep with it. I wake up and my mouth is dry, my nose feels dry and stuffy (even though I don't think it really is stuffy) and I have the sensation that I'm having trouble breathing. I fall in and out of sleep, getting terrible sleep, until I quit. Last night I tried it with a touch of Ambien and a chinstrap, but still woke up at 3:45am with the same scenario. I have no idea if I'm breathing out of my mouth or not. I called Provent and the support person said that a dry mouth doesn't necessarily mean you're breathing out of it, and that it does abate over time.
I cannot afford to fail Provent in terms of tolerance as I have already essentially failed CPAP/APAP/bilevel, so I need all the tips I can get for how to adjust to it. Thanks!
pats wrote:NightMonkey wrote:pats wrote:I'm sorry - I misunderstood the emphasis on "before" as meaning you meant they should not be tried simultaneously, the way I'm doing it.NightMonkey wrote:At this point I continue to maintain that everyone should have an analysis of positional affects on their condition before experimenting with Provent. Many will find that positional therapy is more effective than Provent at no additional ongoing cost and no inconvenience of trying to get little thingies glued air tight onto the nostrils.
You seem to believe both I and the professionals treating and advising me are quite incompetent. Why? Other than reaching different decisions from the ones you prefer, I don't think I've shown any particular evidence of incompetence, and you know even less about the professionals than you know about me.NightMonkey wrote:A simple question to the doc could be something like, "In the sleep study how did I do in nonsupine positions and is there sufficient evidence to say that nonsupine sleeping by itself would be successful or would not be successful in treating my mild apnea?"
pats wrote:You seem to believe both I and the professionals treating and advising me are quite incompetent. Why? Other than reaching different decisions from the ones you prefer, I don't think I've shown any particular evidence of incompetence, and you know even less about the professionals than you know about me.NightMonkey wrote:A simple question to the doc could be something like, "In the sleep study how did I do in nonsupine positions and is there sufficient evidence to say that nonsupine sleeping by itself would be successful or would not be successful in treating my mild apnea?"
There was no need for me to ask the sleep clinic to do that analysis - they do it for every sleep apnea patient. I was told before the sleep study that one of the possible outcomes was that position change alone might be enough. I was told after the study that it would not be sufficient in my case.
Thanks, but I intend to continue to rely for treatment decisions on the advice of a sleep specialist who has all the relevant information. The HMO travel advisory service has already sent me an altitude sickness leaflet, as well as prescribing Diamox.avi123 wrote:I would take the XPAP even if the altitude would be a bit higher than its self adjustment. I would also take a mask that could input Oxygen. When the air is thin at the higher altitude the Provent could be a nuisance. It relies on creating a PEEP on exhalation but blocks full air flow for inspiration. To get enough Oxygen at the higher altitude, while having the Provent in your nose, you would rely entirely on mouth breathing, making the Provent and a chinstrap useless.
Check Altitude Sickness:
http://www.altitude.org/altitude_sickness.php
True. I have stopped getting notifications of new messages to threads I'm subscribed to + been busy, so need to catch up on all threads.ozij wrote:This should go on your original post, with a link to the present one, if you prefer posting here.SleepingUgly wrote:I just saw this new thread about Provent and don't have time to read it all right now. Is anyone here using Provent successfully and can give me advice? I had a thread going, but don't know if I should continue to post there, and maybe put a link here, or post here...
Well, the short story is that I can fall asleep with it, but I can't stay asleep with it. I wake up and my mouth is dry, my nose feels dry and stuffy (even though I don't think it really is stuffy) and I have the sensation that I'm having trouble breathing. I fall in and out of sleep, getting terrible sleep, until I quit. Last night I tried it with a touch of Ambien and a chinstrap, but still woke up at 3:45am with the same scenario. I have no idea if I'm breathing out of my mouth or not. I called Provent and the support person said that a dry mouth doesn't necessarily mean you're breathing out of it, and that it does abate over time.
I cannot afford to fail Provent in terms of tolerance as I have already essentially failed CPAP/APAP/bilevel, so I need all the tips I can get for how to adjust to it. Thanks!
How many nights have you been on Provent? Were you waking during the night last night but still sticking with it or sleeping through?pats wrote:I stuck to Provent for a complete night, without switching to APAP, for the first time last night, and I'm feeling fine this morning. I'm reasonably sure I'm going to be able to adapt. Now I'm trying to decide whether to stay with Provent tonight, or alternate a night on Provent with a night on APAP so that I stay acclimated to both.