I have been reading medical papers on this issue for a while. One major problem is that you cannot find a medical doctor who is experienced in glaucoma and sleep apnea.
Here is my current understanding:
There is a positive correlation between sleep apnea and glaucoma. However, the cause of this correlation is still unclear. My take is that (i) either the CPAP pressure increases the IOP and worsens the outcomes of glaucoma, or (ii) the lowered oxygen saturation during the suffocation periods (either during CPAP treatment or during untreated apnea) worsens glaucoma.
The best option is to get away with as low a CPAP pressure as feasible without risking the oxygen saturation figure dropping below 90%. Switching to side sleep is the most effective way to reduce the needed pressure.
How to do that when you are not a side sleeper? Use some positional training therapies or instruments. I found all the purchasable straps that force you to turn your side useless. It is because the tennis balls, inflatable balloons, or foam wedges are not staying on your back during your sleep but twist to your side, and you find yourself on your back again.
In my case, the following things worked: I purchased from Amazon a PPE against fall
https://safetyequipment.org/wp-content/u...e-2015.pdf
because it has staps on your shoulders and tights and would not twist easily. I also added more straps going from my left tight to my right shoulder and from my right tight to my left shoulder to make it more stable. I also removed some uncomfortable metal rings. I kept the central back element and tightened a baseball on it. I needed the baseball because I could sleep on my back even when I had a couple of tennis balls fixed to my back.
I had a very positive experience: my pressure was significantly reduced.
I also intend to try the Night Shift / Night-Shift / NightShift instrument this year.
https://nightshifttherapy.com/ns-home/
but it is pricy, and I want to hear first some feedback from our members about its success rate. Would you mind posting your experience with it?
Thanks,
G.