In November of 22, I was diagnosed with Sleep Apnea with a score of 54 AHI after my sleep test. I didn't think that I slept at all during the test as the air conditioner in the test room was broken and I was uncomfortable. I stayed still and tried to sleep all night. After getting the results, I figured I must have dozed off long enough to get a good result. I was prescribed a Resmed 11 with a pressure set from 8 to 20.
After a little while I noticed that I was waking up with the pressure blasting me out. I thought after looking at the graphs that I would have some apneas, pressure would increase, I would wake up. I am now most positive that it went like this: I would wake a bit, have waking apneas (garbage to many), pressure would increase, I would wake up fully. This is not a good set up for a solid night's sleep. I changed the ramp time to 45 minutes and would then have to turn the machine off and on again once fully awakened when this occured.
As this is not ideal, I was able to get a titration test set up to find the right pressure. The test used 11 to 14 as the psi to test range. I slept very well, and it went smashingly, I was able to handle all the pressures given and my AHI was down to 2.4. Life is good, the therapy is working wonderfully. So, after the test I was able to talk the pa into changing the range to 8-12 psi. It seems that I can handle this amount awake or asleep,
Next thing to happen was that I noticed my apneas while awake (some say garbage) were not being scored during the ramp period. I was coming out with very good AHIs but I saw that while awake I had what should have been scored as numerous Apneas (garbage). Okay, time to get rid of the ramp time. Oh my, the colors are a many. Crazy amounts of apneas (garbage) and so consistent. I must test this.
I took the machine down to my man cave and watched some tv while wearing the machine. I then looked at the results and noticed something a bit odd. I dozed off a couple of times and when I did my respiration rate jumped from ~7 to ~17. I looked at this phenomenom going back historically and noticed the same held true quite consistently; when awake my respiration rate was around 7 and when asleep it was around 17. So much so that you can point out when I was asleep vs awake.
Now the history of why I went to get a sleep study in the first place. I mentioned to my doctor that I would often catch myself holding my breath and I knew it wasn't very normal. I have been asked "What" a couple of times when I sigh while breathing as the speaker thought I was showing disaproval. Sorry bud, just breathing the way I do here. My doctor recommended a sleep study and here we are.
Now with Oscar I can see it on a chart; when awake I breathe in deep, hold for a second, and let it out slow. If I let it out slower than 10 secs it's flagged as an apnea. When asleep it is breathe in breathe out very consistently. I know that holding your breath is not an abnormal thing, but I do it all the time while awake. I have attached some images showing the difference between when I sleep and when I'm awake. For these charts, I set the lower and upper pressure to 4 with no ramp time via the clinical menu.
I guess I officially have waking Bradynpea as it is a condition where you breathe slower than 12 breaths a minute but it is not a diagnosis. I have always breathed this way I am not willing to doctor it up further looking for a word to put on it. But, what I guess would be helpful is if anybody has any thoughts as to why I breathe this way: Apneustic breathing during the day and breathing like a champ while sleeping. Mostly just curious.
What I really want to know is if anybody thinks that my original sleep study was mis-scored. I believe the original 54 was actually apneas marked while I was awake (eyes were shut and I was still while trying to fall sleep). I cannot test myself at home except with the resmed set to lowest level. Maybe the machine is helping while I sleep, but can't be positive. I am going to use a locked pressure of 4 for a while when sleeping to see what my AHI is. If the AHI is very low while sleeping, I might scratch using the CPAP it as I don't believe having 0 psi will be much different than 4 psi.
Thanks for any help or thoughts on the subject.
Notes:
I'm a 56 year old male in generally good health.
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My spo2 levels are fine both awake and asleep.