Unfortunately, you can't export data from SnoreLab, so I put my Olympus voice recorder to use with an external microphone which I tape to my headboard above my head. I am getting about 128 MB of sound files per night.
There is excellent agreement between the audio data viewed and played back in Audacity and the Flow Rate chart in Oscar. On the audio data, I can clearly see Central Apnea patterns and apneas occurring. These match very nicely to the Event Flags and Flow Rate in Oscar.
I can find events during the night when I lift the mask in my sleep to wipe away my mouth or scratch my nose. These always show us as gray zones on the Leak Rate chart. In my 12 days of using CPAP and OSCAR, the program has not once misidentified a leak as an apnea event.
I can hear what are probably arousals when I toss and turn over. I hear an occasional cough.
Most of the time, I am not snoring. For the 12 nights of data collection, I have averaged 44 Centrals/night vs 6 Obstructives/night. Typically, I do have night time yawns or big inhalations/exhalations. SnoreLab confirms this.
Questions to sleep experts and OSCAR Team:
- Do you see any added benefit to recording sleep using the voice recorder? Or is it just barely a curiosity for me at this stage?
- If you think there IS added benefit to capturing 64 or 128 kbps audio files, can you add a feature to OSCAR to synchronize and play audio files directly within OSCAR? Right now I have to run the two programs simultaneously and switch between them. I could see another row of sound data with the existing rows and the option to play or not play the sound associated with the area where you are zoomed in.