I used my ResMed AirCurve 10 VAuto for the first time last night. My sincerest gratitude to each member at this board that was so very helpful in my acquiring this machine, as well as, to have enlightened me along the way. This truly has been an empowering experience and I think that is consistent with your mission as stated on the home page under "
About Apnea Board" located at the bottom of the page. And I think it appears on every page.
and feeling very empowered!
Settings:
Mode VAuto
Max IPAP 16
Min EPAP 5
PS 5.4
TI Max 2.0 (default?)
TI Min 0.3 (default?)
Trigger Med (default?)
Cycle Med (default?)
Mask Full Face
EERS 12 inches
Logic of these settings (such as there is any logic):
I was trying to get this machine set up pretty close to the way my AirSense 10 Autoset was set up as I used last on Feb 6, night before last and for multiple nights before that. A big change made on purpose is the setting for pressure support. Slowriter had recommended
here in Post 100 of this thread, a pressure support value of 4. Some weeks ago JoeyWallaby had shared his settings and flow patterns
here in Post 37 of this thread. Joey used a setting of 5.4. I am of the belief that in experimentation if you want to see an effect you need to be as "aggressive" as you think the process can tolerate. I felt 4 was a bit conservative and that Joey's shared data gave me a safe aggressive setting. Had I not been able to tolerate this much pressure support, I felt it would be obvious quickly and that I could lower it during the night if needed.
I had a lot of dialog with Geer1 in many recent posts about the additional settings on the AirCurve 10 for which there are no equivalent settings on the AirSense 10, these being, Trigger, Cycle, Ti Max, and Ti Min. I was really concerned that cardiogenic oscillations that were so prevalent in my breathing pattern obtained on the AirSense might really compromise the functionality of these four settings. I think I have all of these set at "default" values, but have added a question mark to each entry above. I'm fairly sure from the clinician manual the default for trigger and cycle is Med. But my machine had 21 hours of use on it as received, i.e., it had been used at least in a demonstration setting. So these settings (values found on the machine as received) might have been changed and the clinician manual is not very definitive. As you can see from the results below, it does appear, based on sleeping through only one night, to have been a wasted worry. I am still in need of help understanding and maybe modifying these settings. See questions later.
Observations, Results and Questions:
Flow limits are almost gone
. The 95% and maximum flow limits reported in the detail screen are 0.01 and 0.1, respectively. Those are easily the lowest I've seen. That is what this substitution of machines was all about. If this result persists this whole effort including investment in the new pump will have been rewarded admirably.
Cardiogenic oscillations (assuming Geer1 and I have these named correctly) are almost completely absent. I say almost because I can see occasionally an oscillation somewhere on the flow pattern. But I can't find anywhere where the presence of said oscillations cause a breath to be counted more than once because of multiple double crossings of the zero line in the flow pattern. Hence there was less need to worry about the extra AirCurve 10 parameters discussed above.
Flow patterns look good to me. I'm including a pop out of these
for your review and comments. My pop out for last night is combined with one of my earlier flow patterns showing dense cardiogenic oscillations and one showing characteristics of flow limitations.
Respiration Rate chart is the least noisy I've seen. The machine reported a RR of 13 and OSCAR refined that number to 12.8 in the details screen. The RR stayed very close to 13 throughout the night with only two or three brief periods of much variation at all. Note that I have often seen "apparent" values maxing out at 50 breaths per minute for 10s of minutes.
Apneas are very acceptable, but not as low as I've seen. They appear to be relatively clustered and not to be SWJ (sleep wake junk). I even wonder if they might have been positional. And there are long periods throughout the night where both apneas and flow limits appear to be completely absent.
Does that mean I slept better during those periods? I'm assuming/hoping so. Also, I am gratified that the rather large increase in pressure support didn't bring on a significant number of central apneas. I'm assuming that the EERS can be credited with keeping them in check. Anyway I will be wanting to follow this closely and maybe to eventually check out the impact of reducing EERS to 6 inches. I'm not interested in going to 18.
Tidal Volume went up to 800. I haven't shared my analysis of the data from my experiment, but for some output parameters, including tidal volume, I have reduced the data to mathematical models. The pressure support of 5.4 really requires me to extrapolate quite a bit and any scientist or engineer worth his salt knows extrapolation to be a dangerous practice. I certainly wouldn't make a business decision based on such extrapolation. But if you allow me that flexibility I would have predicted a value of 811 cc for tidal volume, most of the increase coming from the impact of pressure support. For now no one can challenge that conclusion or my data analysis, because it isn't published. I hope to find a way to share those models at an appropriate level of detail. But this observation is reassuring that the experiment may turn out to be useful. Regardless, the reality is that OSCAR and the machine reported a Median Tidal Volume of 800.
Is that bad? If so, then I still can't pronounce the EERS to be the tool I want to use to keep central apneas in check while simultaneously using higher pressure support to keep flow limits in check. If I don't need to be concerned about tidal volume than publication of my results could turn out to be quite useful to others that might consider using the EERS to attenuate the negative effect of increased pressure support (that being the onset of CA events). And in my case there may well be room for optimization.
E:I ratio is nowhere reported in the OSCAR Detail screen, but was reported on the machine itself in the clinician mode sleep report as 1:1.8. I know from the manual that that value is critical to setting the Ti Max and Ti Min values optimally.
Can this ratio be calculated manually from other parameters reported in the detail screen? If so, I haven't figured out how.
Can you help me use that value to reset Ti Max and/or Ti Min?
And
Spont Cycle was reported on the machine as 93%. It seems intuitive to me that this value is also related to the Ti Max and/or Ti Min.
Is 93% good? Should I strive to make it better? If so, which way do I need to change Ti Max and/or Ti Min?
Comfort was okay to very acceptable. I can honestly say I wasn't uncomfortable, but I do think I sensed a bit of effort breathing toward the end of inspiration as my diaphragm was changing directions to start expiration. So a pressure support of 5.4 might be a little too high. I don't plan on changing right away though. Perhaps even that sense of effort will quickly dissipate with use. Also, this could be ameliorated with an optimized Ti Max or Ti Min.
Thoughts?