(12-25-2018, 09:16 AM)Sleeprider Wrote: I'm going to be the voice of dissent here. Your test results indeed point to clusters of apnea/hypopnea accompanied by snores which suggest positional apnea and might offer an opportunity for the low or no CPAP therapy. However you had persistent RERA throughout the night associated with low SpO2, and these arousals are very disruptive to sleep quality. I presume that without CPAP, you will have fairly persistent upper airway restriction which is apparently easily treated at fairly low pressures.
My observation of your CPAP results is that you are at pressures of 4-9 with EPR at 3. All of your centrals occur at the higher pressures when EPR is at full extent. In my opinion the EPR is providing pressure support that minimizes flow limitation, but pressure is mostly increasing on flow limits (the flow limit graph is mostly cutoff). If I was optimizing your CPAP, I would select a pressure range of 6-9 at EPR 2.
Bottom line is I think you benefit significantly from CPAP, even at low therapy pressures, but your pressure range and EPR need optimized.
Thanks for the input. I'm not really sure what flow limitation is about, I'll need to look that one up. Last night I tried the 4 pressure setting, but as Melman indicated it was too restrictive and I felt uncomfortable trying to breathe. I gave up after an hour and adjusted it up to 5 - 5.5. No OA's overnight and just one CA, but at the end of the night there were a bunch of RERA's. I may try different low pressures during the day when I have spare time to see how they feel.
My wife is doing really well on her machine with scores of 0 or less than 1. Although she is having trouble getting used to the mask. We are now two peas in a pod with our machines, so life is good! Merry Christmas and Happy Sleeping to all!!