Am trying to help a parent(mommy, 72 years old) with here cpap therapy.
I have attached an example of a typical breathing curve, with the settings she currently is using.
But since I'm not able to get the more sinus shaped curve with proper rounded edges, which is desribed as being the optimal breathing patterin. I wonder if someone is able to provide feedback for CPAP settings to try, by just looking at the breathing curve and current settings used! :-)
I have a suspicion that she might suffer from UARS, where bi-level is needed for optimal breathing. But I need a way to verify this for sure! ;-)
Hope someone in here, has some experience with this! :-)
The reason for CPAP treatment, in here case, was not high AHI numbers(about 5,2 AHI in sleep study), but long lasting apnea's (+60 seconds) resulting in blood oxygens dips in the 7x% (SpO2).
I very easily lowered here AHI number to below 1 in OSCAR using CPAP(first try actually).
BUT, after that initial succes...and initial improvement in sleep quality, there seems to be room for more improvement. As she still experiences lack of energy and the amount of sleep(especially deep sleep), varies a lot from night to night. Suggesting my "work" is not done yet! ;-)
She uses a Resmed Airsense 10 autoset, together with a Resmed nasal mask (N20). Using "pillow" setting, as descriebed in the manual! ;-)
I feel like I have tried almost all combinations that her Resmed machine offers(different pressure ranges/all EPR ranges and without it, AUTO CPAP mode and just a set pressure with CPAP mode, different mask settings and humidity settings etc. etc.) but not been able to improve further beyond this point.
She recently had a heart surgery(double by-pass), which seems to have influenced here breathing some what....here AHI got a bit lower for awhile.
Hope someone can help shed some light on this topic......would be greatly appreciated! :-D
Kind regards
Daniel