(12-05-2023, 04:57 PM)Travel2BFree Wrote: The frequent waking is fairly normal for me. I assumed it was related to the urge to urinate which is probably due to enlarged prostrate. Lately, I have had more difficulty than usual getting to sleep and staying asleep. I am not exactly sure what it is all about. It could also be related to a medication that I am tapering off of. I only take one medication, methadone, and it is not unusual to have difficulty sleeping when tapering.
If you goggle "Central Sleep Apnea with Methadone" you will find several studies that recognize the relationship between the two. So if you are tapering off the methadone there may be relief from all of your CA events
after you've cleared your system and your body has time to recover. That may be something to discuss with your Sleep Doctor or PCP.
Otherwise I suggest you may have to accept some of the CA's, unless someone here has prior experience they can enlighten us with. But I encourage you to go for the comfort settings that maybe out there.
Meanwhile as for your waking several times a night, that guy that sleeps here, had a Urologist address the very same issue. First the Urologist took pictures of the inside of his bladder to ensure that there were no complications there, As the camera passed the prostrate the urologist commented "That should ream the prostrate out". Now I have to tell you, the only anesthesia they offered,,, was a little lube that contained "4% Lidocaine", smeared on that long snake like camera tube.
Oh and I got to hold his hand to distract him while this procedure was going on. The urologist did write a prescription for "Tamsulosin" commonly called "FlowMax" by the pharmacy techs. Since then the nighty pee awakenings has reduced to only once every third night, instead of 5 to 6 times per night.
So if you decide to go that route, when it was My turn to have bladder pics, I told them only if I was in the hospital, under general anesthesia with an anesthesiologist watching over me. After the pics were taken I walked out of the hospital, no wheelchair ride for me. And I could walk, didn't need three days in bed. Of course I don't have a prostrate either.