First time poster here. We’re all so lucky to have such a supportive and active community.
I’ve been on CPAP therapy for 3 months now and I’ve been experimenting with different settings- fixed, auto, different rates, etc.
I think I found a sweet spot, but still have poor sleep quality and wanted to get the community’s input on what might be happening.
I realized two days ago that I might be having a palatal prolapse when I exhale, based on the flow rate patterns. In fact, this even happens sometimes when I’m relaxing awake with my chin tucked on my couch- sort of a ‘reverse snore’ when exhaling. FYI- athletic, reasonable BMI, exercise, etc.
Then I realized that I had the EPR set to 3, which was allowing the soft palate to swing shut on exhale. I turned EPR off, maintaining therapy pressure on exhales, which it seemed to help, but still felt a bit crappy in the morning. I thought maybe this was because the pressure was too high, and reduced it, with the max pressure set the 95% mark.
Last night, nasal mask, mouth taped, Autoset 7-10.6, I’ve had the best AHI in 3 months, but still feel like I didn’t sleep well.
I then zoomed in on the flow rate and identified three areas that seemed funky. (see attached photos)
1:34:35-1:39-56 5 minutes
4:59:08-5:01:07 2 minutes
5:05:07-5:08:00 3 minutes
[attachment=53440]
Based on the attached photos, are the flat spots between positive flow peaks palatal prolapses, and if so, what’s happening to my exhaled air if there aren’t any mask leaks? Is this pattern enough to ruin sleep quality and/or cause C02 rebreathing issues?
Aside from correcting this in some way, and all other variables aside, are there any other machine settings or techniques that might be contributing to poor sleep quality? I’m stumped. I just don’t feel right in the morning.
Thanks for your help!
Michael