Yep, they know this. I've had several 24/48 hour cardiac, blood pressure, etc monitors, as well as my sleep study, they're WELL aware of this, and I've shown people this info before as well. When I'm awake, my average is usually about low-mid-90s, so a little low maybe, but not super bad I had some initial tests done regarding lung function but apparently those were fine. But I will track it longer term and see what it says. It's definitely not in the range that it is at night, that's for sure.
I know that this is at a level where most people would be in hospital on oxygen, and I genuinely don't know why my doctors don't seem to give a damn. Your guess is as good as mine, to be honest.
I do sometimes have nights where I spend much less time in hypoxia territory (usually when it's an overall bad night and I'm waking up ALL the damn time or can't sleep). But it's always linked yes. Is it linked to my chart? I would say so. It can be blatantly obvious, like this:
Other times, my sats don't recover quite so much, depending on the length of the apneas and the frequency of them, plus how effective my breathing is between those breaths... But yeah. It's always pretty easy to match up the pattern of the SpO2 chart and my CPAP data. Not just CAs but also flow restrictions etc, or even areas that are almost-apneas but aren't quite long enough to be tagged (or otherwise not "normal" breathing etc).