Thank you very much Gideon. Sorry I fell back to typing CSR when I had been trying to type "CSR"-pattern or cluster of CAs... And now I see it is in fact "Periodic breathing", and from 7 years ago I remember all that about the feedback cycle. Great, thanks.
I was told by my first sleep doctor when I investigated CAs that I wasn't supposed to worry about CAs. She insisted that my AHI < 5 meant that I my sleep was just just being interrupted by "alpha-wave intrusion" (per the sleep & brainwave study) and I need Ambien or Doxepin or similar drug (at smaller doses, not the anti-depressant dose). I tried as she said and I hated the drugs, didn't want to be on them, joined a gym lost weight and felt much better. So I moved to a new doctor about 5 years ago, who didn't pursue drugs with me.
The new doc said I needed to reduce my cpap pressure, that the CAs can be pressure induced. Here's an excerpt from Mayo Clinic:
"Some people with obstructive sleep apnea develop central sleep apnea while using [CPAP treatment]. This condition is known as treatment-emergent central sleep apnea and is a combination of obstructive and central sleep apneas."
That excerpt uses the term "central" but in fact all we know, without a sleep / brainwave study, is OSCAR reports "clear airways" - is my understanding. And that sometimes we turn during the night and there's just a spurious CA event recorded -
http://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Thread-...rway-Event
I did reduce my pressure from 11 to 10 and then tried to go to 9 but at 9 I didn't feel I got enough flow, and felt bad the next day. I tried to go to 9 or 9.2 two or three times. I had to settle on 10. But I could try again I suppose to go lower.
(That doctor left the practice and the new replacement doctor I'm with now asked if I wanted to try Trazodone, reasons stated in my just-prior post)
Anyway, back to my Periodic Breathing (the subject of this post). I've noticed a couple months ago quite remarkably, and this has never happened before, that I could take a nap (my sleep got a little worse since COVID / gaining weight or for whatever reason like stress) - without my CPAP - and after the nap I felt fine. Previously I'd wake up feeling horrible.
So last night I woke up once at 3am and didn't put the mask back on. I feel like I slept the rest of the night well, but it's just one time, getting consistency on trying things is a herculean task. But the idea is that maybe I don't need the CPAP. Maybe I'm actually not that ok - like how I feel later today - so take this with a grain of salt.
Since my OSCAR charts / stats show few obstructive apneas, and few hypopneas, maybe I don't need CPAP? But then I am in fact using CPAP which is providing the continual positive airflow to reduce them to begin with. So maybe I just have to try it and find out.
Is my CPAP treatment helping in reducing the occurrences of Periodic Breathing (PB) by providing a steady airflow? Or could the CPAP actually be inducing the PB? But if it's stress correlated as it appears (I'll start up again my rigorous sleep spreadsheet), that's another story I won't pursue here, but as SR said, sleep hygiene and CBT type treatments for anxiety once further along could help all this.
I did have a new overnight sleep study a few years ago, a "split study" and found that without CPAP I had an AHI of like 17, obstructive apneas, not good. I don't recall how they measured that, but the result was I needed CPAP. I need to take all this up with the new sleep doctor.
Thanks