(07-17-2023, 07:29 PM)cmpman1974 Wrote: This is my sleep with a 2L O2 bleed into my BPAP line. None of my apneas are over 15 sec in duration so now way they are responsible for this many periodic drops. I still had 28 min under 90%. Without supplemental O2, I'm usually 1.5 - 2.5 hrs under 90%. Working with a pulmonologist now to try to understand that is happening.
I am NOT sold on the VI Health / Wellue devices being completely accurate though. I really would like to compare min by min findings on my CheckmeMax to the $1k Nonin oximeter my pulmonary doc had me wear. I think Wellue greatly exaggerates the levels and duration of O2 drops, but the devices have some merit. Until you compare on to the other, it's hard to know for sure.
They're accurate enough. That's why they're FDA approved.
Now you are supplementing with o2 overnight it's time to use reduced pressures without as much pressure support.
These settings and this much pressure support is probably not what your lungs need and could/will be making things *far* worse, as they did in my case before I discovered o2 and lung dysfunction was the real culprit all along. Especially during your REM cycles.. these settings will be causing absolute chaos. You can see the chaos all night in your flow chart from it all. Significantly worse during REM.
You're having to breathe out against EPAP 9 /and/ you're being significantly ventilated with your incredibly high IPAP. A recipe for disaster.
I would be interested to see that 2L bleed with a lot less assistance from the PAP and pressure support.
It's time to titrate yourself again from square one and throw out all previous assumptions regarding PAP therapy.
You could start with Vauto mode, EPAP 4 with pressure support of 2 and let the machine go where it wants to. Trigger very high.
The important thing is reducing that EPAP and pressure support so you can exhale easier and reduce the respiratory swings from crazy over-ventilation.
I think you'll be pleasantly surprised and the next breakthrough in your sleep will happen.