(02-19-2024, 09:34 PM)SarcasticDave94 Wrote: I'm intrigued by the fact that your doctor's office didn't like that you went rouge and bought the CPAP before they could sell you one. They're probably very worried about the lost revenue.
Yeah thats kind of the impression I got, and somewhat soured my otherwise good experience with Lofta. They even said they could sell it at a discount, which was tempting. I didn't want to go through the hassle of returning the one that was already on the way for only a few dozen dollars in savings, though.
Granted, most people probably aren't as informed by resources such as this forum. The person on the phone argued the C2C version was a bad deal because, among other things, there was no way for the therapy to be adjusted except by mailing it back to the supplier, plus the inconvenience of relying on an SD card to share data with a physician. The average person won't know that the clinical settings are easily accessible, and thus would be in for an inferior experience. I dunno.
(02-20-2024, 07:53 AM)Old Steve Wrote: It appears that you are making progress.
As to Sleeprider's suggestion...Sleeprider has more Sleep Apnea knowledge in his little fingers than I have in my whole body.
Gotcha
(02-20-2024, 09:10 AM)Sleeprider Wrote: I thought I'd comment on what I see in this graph where we were looking at the flow spikes. At the very beginning of this snip, there are high flow limitations which results in reduced respiratory flow and rapidly rising pressure. This culminates in about 3-breaths of recovery breathing and triggers a periodic respiratory spike at 40-second intervals. The really large arousal at 1:08:40 fully satisfies respiratory needs and causes a pause in breathing at 1:09:10 that resolves. The Hypopnea flag simply notes the 30-50% flow reduction for that period, but is probably a false flag without desaturation. I can't explain the periodic spikes, but it looks like movement from the bleachers here.
This really brings me back to the previous recommendation I made to increase minimum pressure and EPR to avoid those flow limits that arise near your current minimum pressure.
Thanks for the insight - I find all of this very fascinating.
Looking back at the footage, I can confirm those spikes coincide with movement. As for why they're at 40-second intervals... I don't know. Coincidence, maybe? It stops after I wake slightly and adjust my mask.
I've gone ahead and set the minimum pressure to 7 (with a maximum of 12 still, as per Old Steve's recommendation earlier) ahead of tonight's sleep. I'm off the next two days, so I can sleep in and hopefully get good data.
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In the meantime, here's last night's data. I took my mask off at one point in the middle of my sleep My girlfriend came to the rescue once more when she went to bed and woke me up once she noticed. According to her, I said I thought I was getting up for work soon (even though I had at least 3 hours of sleep left) when asked why I took it off. I had no recollection of any of this until I watched the footage, and now I vaguely remember the details. A real bummer, but hopefully won't happen again.
I otherwise recall waking up a couple of times to some slight leaking. Maybe I didn't tighten the headgear very well this time around.