08-28-2018, 12:30 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-28-2018, 12:31 PM by mesenteria.)
In praise of the cervical collar
Woo hoo! First thread!
It won't be news to those who already use them, but it might provide a whiff of encouragement to those who are sitting on the fence. This is about my wife...not me.
My wife has gotten...umm.....noisy. For perhaps the last four to five years she has developed a rumbling that threatens to shake the paint off the walls in our bedroom...and on down the hallway to where I am trying to watch TV quietly. She begged me to come back to the bedroom at night after we began sleeping apart. I relented, but it was becoming impossible. I developed my own sleep problems, a heart arrhythmia, and nothing else changed except that I went on medication and PAP.
To keep this sweetly short, I learned about cervical collars' efficacy even for those who are already getting close-to-decent therapy with PAP alone right here on this forum. I'm not an especially bright bulb, but eventually I thought to encourage my wife, who knows she has apnea, but who has other issues that need fixing first, to see if she could improve her sleeping/noisiness just by trying a collar for a few nights.
Short...I remember...short. Okay, she hated it at first. Still does, really. It's too warm. We literally sleep with a fan running on her all night long, but that was prior to the trial with the collar. I'm serious. Thyroid issues since 20 years of age. But, I keep telling her she is much less noisy. I don't hear her through my ear plugs anymore. She persisted, and now seems more or less resigned to its continued use, even if solely on my say-so. She claims she doesn't feel different. We in the PAP world read and hear it all the time. But she has accepted my word that she is indeed sleeping better. No more awful snorting and obvious apnea.
In closing, they're relatively inexpensive, readily available, and they're effective. We have to deal with my wife's apnea eventually, but for now, the lowly cervical collar has improved her wellbeing...and mine...in a way few would think possible by itself. If you need to help with apnea now...tonight...whether tweaking it to get a lower AHI or to get by until you can be diagnosed formally and treated...a cervical collar may be the ticket.
My thanks to all who frequent and who manage this wonderful forum.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
Another new user (from a FB Group)
Last night I used the cervical collar for the first time!! I had 0.25 episodes, no leakage from my mask, & slept for 9 hours nonstop! Since January, 2018, I have been battling mask leakage every night, episodes of 25.7 per hour of stopped breathing, & absolute exhaustion!!!!
25.7 decreased to .25!!!!!!
Be aware that results will vary between individuals.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
That's one way to keep the wife quiet.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
(08-28-2018, 12:51 PM)Walla Walla Wrote: That's one way to keep the wife quiet.
Keeping your wife quiet is an urban myth!
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
at the risk of talking out of school, my wife is not known for being quiet, awake or asleep (of course I love her; just not entirely sure whether because of it or in spite of it!)
her open mouth snoring has evolved over the years & she's always suffered choking and coughing fits in sleep. lately I've noticed she's begun to have apnea events. not a lot and usually only during a certain hour or two.
anyway, I thought I was pretty clever, talking her into wearing a c-collar. I figured I'd benefit from quieting her snoring and she'd benefit from less choking, coughing and apnea.
well, she lasted about 4 nights. her c-collar improved things for me, but she didn't feel enough of a benefit to outweigh the discomfort. she might be talked into trying again if I pressed her but I won't because I really can't blame her for not wanting to wear it.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
Thanks, everyone. I wish I had a brilliant insight and could propose a way to make the collar seem, or feel, like it was doing wonders to those hapless wearers who complain that they don't seem to be doing any good. In my wife's case, bless her for indulging me more than she cared to, she resorted to wearing a cool wet face cloth around her neck before placing the collar there. That made it tolerable enough that she would be sawing logs gently when I came to bed. What a change!
I forgot to relay in my original post that my wife does 90% of her 'sleeping' on her back. She has stomach issues, so she sleeps usually with two pillows to keep her throat higher than her stomach. That means chin-tucking in short order, and we all know the rest.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
Mesentaria, not sure what collar you tried, but there are several styles. Perhaps your wife would be more open to using one of the wedges that fit under the chin, but don't wrap around the neck. We're talking styles like Dr. Dakota Snoring Stop, or the Eliminator Series sleep aid cushion on Amazon.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
It's the typical one with the full foam, cloth-covered, wrap-around with a chin dip, and a Velcro patch to secure it. It is imported by a local medical supply company, probably from Indonesia/Philippines or China. I notice that it has a harder thin plastic support immediately under the cloth running about 7" long and just over an inch wide. It is centred on the 'dip'.
I showed my wife the example you kindly display above, Sleeprider, and she feels that what she has is probably going to do for now. If she changes her mind, and her tolerance for what she's using wanes, I'll remind her that there are other configurations and sizes.
RE: In praise of the cervical collar
Sounds great. I'm glad it is working to make a quieter night and better sleep for both of you.
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