Very excited to have discovered this place. I lurked for a few days trawling through the old threads and seeing how many people's lives have been improved, and I'm hoping that with a little advice, I can be one of those people.
A bit of background: I suspect my story is a familiar one. I'm 33, and I can scarcely remember a time where I haven't felt mildly to severely tired on a given day, with all of the impatience and frustration it entails. More specifically, I encounter rarely feeling rested after sleep, mild to heavy mental fog every day, and occasional bouts of insomnia (waking up and not falling back asleep).
When researching apnea (again), I discovered that UARS is a thing, and by gum it sounds like something I might have. For full context, I've provided whole situation, but for those with something better to do this evening, my goal with this first post is to get advice on a couple of questions before I embark on my first at-home sleep study. For basic context, I personally ordered a Watchpat One to get a baseline to follow for OSA or UARS.
- What's the general philosophy on "sleep assistance tools" for an at-home test? Is it recommended I skip some/all of those so that the test can give the worst (most accurate?) possible picture?
- For context, I use (occasional) melatonin, body pillow for positioning/support, nightly nasal rinse, and a nasal strip.
- Sleep study (and a nap study) 7 years ago revealed no apnea. Naturally, the doctors went with depression as the cause and put me on Wellbutrin for a few years. I eventually weaned off of it.
- It's really hard for me to say whether or not the meds helped. I had kids around the weaning time, so sleep disruptions were pretty common regardless.
- Also worth noting, since the sleep study, I've lost about 70 pounds total (healthy at 180 now), started exercising daily, and eating mostly clean.
- Just before COVID, I (wearily) decided to give the medical rigmarole another shot. I started with ENT and allergy test.
- Biggest takeaways were a deviated septum and a mild dust mite allergy. Both likely contribute to the sinus/breathing issues mentioned above.
I can mostly function any given day, but the prospect of spending a couple years and several thousand dollars on jack fills me with a particular flavor of weariness and dread.
Bringing me to today. I picked up a Watchpat, and before anything else I want to make sure I use it "right" because I'm terrified of it either not really working at all or giving a result that says, "You're fine." or "It's probably depression." Depending upon the results there, I'm already prepared to either bite the bullet and get cracking on the sleep doctors OR potentially to pick up the AirCurve Auto (out of pocket) and get cracking on my own therapy.
Thanks to anyone for reading all this, and thanks in advance for anyone willing to impart some wisdom.