Be careful in assuming the machine really knows what is going on when it scores an event. For example in the attached chart
the machine says I have a Hypopnia at 5:16:25 and it's assumed to occur while I was asleep. But if you look closely, my breathing pattern changed at 5:08:22. It became quicker and the shape went from flat topped to more rounded then back to flat topped and slow then rounded and faster again at 5:10:10. From careful observations of several weeks I know the faster and rounded waveform indicates I was awake and thus the breathing pattern should not be attributed to AHI.
Now if the machine had seen a 10 second gap in breathing between the slow and fast breathing patterns it would have indicated an OA or CA which caused the wake event and that would most definitely be scored in the AHI.
But, if there is a fast rounded breathing pattern with a 10 second gap it typically means I was awake and held my breath for a short period in which case it really doesn't count...
The best indicator for me that there's a problem worth looking at is if SPO2 drops at the same time as the scored event. Since I started using a machine I've eliminated drops below 85%, so I'm sure this is helping. I also haven't wanted to take a cat nap on the way into or at the office while using the machine (not quite 100% compliant due to nose bruising).
While not included in my posted chart, the SPO2 reading also shows increased saturation slightly after 5:10:10 and nothing significant at the time of the Hypopnia...