(07-13-2018, 09:35 PM)srlevine1 Wrote: It appears when I eat fatty or greasy foods, I too, suffer from gallbladder (gallstone confirmed with ultrasound) symptoms which I notice leads to shallower breathing -- mainly to avoid additional pain in my upper quadrant. I can see the depression on both Sleepyhead and ResScan charts.
I notice that you have some major leakage which can skew the readings. Is this a "trending" pattern experienced several days in a row.
And, I am curious about what you are using to record your SPO2 levels.
Best of luck with resolving the issue. Perhaps some of the sharpshooters here can hone in on an issue based on the limited chart data.
I'm surprised to hear someone else have similar issues. My doctors think I'm crazy that at age 46, I have respiratory depression issues. My sleep doctor says all is good, since my AHI for 30 days is low. He never looks at individual days and refuses to look at my Sleepyhead printouts showing this issue. t first, I thought it was my Multaq medicine for AFIB causing the issue, because it sometimes happened an hour after I ate food with it. But now, I'm thinking it is fatty foods and my gallbladder causing this weird "unwell" feeling. But I don't have pain or anything and the doctors say these symptoms are not typical for gallbladder issues.
No my leaks have been under control, since I started using a dental appliance. I'm using a Contec CMS50F for SPO2. It is fairly accurate most of the time, at least if I don't move. I checked it with one in the hospital, when I was admitted last month for DVT/PE. I'm now on blood thinners. When I get this shallow breathing, sometimes it causes major anxiety, and when I lay down in bed, I feel my heart palpitations majorly near my belly button. I had a recent Ultrasound, so no indication of Aortic Aneurysm. My sleep doctor also sent me an SPO2 MEDICAL GRADE DEVICE for one night, but it was during one of my good nights. If only he would listen to me and order one for full month, I could show him what happens.
I've been through multiple tests and seen all kinds of doctors, had a brain EEG, and they can't determine what is causing the shallow breathing and unwell feeling. So I scheduled to have my gallbladder surgery. The surgeon said it is full, and it's best to be proactive and take it out, since I'm on blood thinners. He said if a stone dislodges, it could go to my pancreas and on blood thinners, that would be a disaster. I'm hoping once it comes out, maybe that was the cause of my shallow breathing. If not, then only thing left is a colonscopy.
Here is a sample of what happens when I first try to go asleep. Notice between 15:00 and 20:00, that my O2 slowly drops to the 90% and stays there. That's when my breathing gets shallow. That causes me to have either CA's or OA's, which then cause major drop, which is seen after 20:00. My O2 Alarm wakes me up, and my heart races to get my O2 back to normal. Then i go to sleep, and the same thing happens. This continued one night, all night long and I didn't get any sleep because my oxygen kept dropping. I basically had to wait another day, until the symptoms went away to go to sleep.
This has been occuring for 3 months now, off and on. I've been losing weight rapidly too, since October, 30lbs, and that is why my Gastro doctor wants to do colonscopy.
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