(10-12-2014, 09:56 AM)dubli Wrote: Wondering, in your opinion, which is a better machine (for more comfortable use) out of the...
- ResMed CPAP S9 AutoSet
and the
- ResMed VPAP ST (from S9 series)
???
Which would be more comfortable to wear?
If I have to chose out of Bipap and Auto-adjusting - which is better/more important??
Which is newer model?
Which is better overall?
(10-12-2014, 07:21 PM)justMongo Wrote: If you have significant central apnea (CA) where your brain does not tell your lungs to breathe, you many need an ASV machine.
(Auto Servo Ventilator). In another thread, you asked about the timed backup rate in a VPAP ST machine. That's an attempt to solve mild CA by forcing IPAP when the patient doesn't cause a spontaneous (S) switch to IPAP by inhaling.
Hi dubli,
As justMongpo pointed out, the ResMed VPAP ST has a backup rate, meaning it will cycle back and forth between a lower EPAP pressure (for exhalation) and a higher IPAP pressure (for inhalation), even if the patient is in the middle of a central or obstructive apnea and has stropped breathing. Whether the reason you have stopped breathing is central or obstructive, the machine will try to help you breathe after just a few seconds of waiting for you to breathe on your own.
The ASV machines (like PhillisBalboa and I have) do this also, except the ASV machines can also INCREASE the amount of Pressure Support as much as may be needed to keep us breathing our normal amount. With an ST machine, there is an automatic backup rate but no automatic adjustment of EPAP and no automatic adjustment of PS, and the PS often is only high enough to keep us partially ventilated if we completely halt all breathing effort. The VPAP ST machine is in the same class of machines as ASV machines, meaning it is just as difficult to get insurance to cover one as the other.
The standard VPAP machine is the VPAP S (not VPAP ST), which has no backup rate and has fixed (manually adjusted) EPAP and fixed PS. Bi-level machines without a backup rate are in a lower class of machines than the ones with a backup rate, meaning it's easer to get insurance to cover the standard VPAP machines. Like all machines which do not have a backup rate, if we are in the middle of an apnea the machine will do nothing to interrupt the apnea.
The auto-adjusting VPAP Auto has no backup rate and has fixed PS but does auto-adjust EPAP to avoid obstructive conditions like obstructive apneas, hypopneas, Flow Limitation and Snore. It is in the same insurance classification as the non-auto standard VPAP machines.
The Philips Respironics BiPAP Auto has more features than the ResMed VPAP Auto. It can (very slowly) adjust PS every few minutes a little higher and lower, to see if a higher or lower amount of PS would be better. It also has Flex, which is an additional type of exhalation relief. But I think most who have compared the two machines have reported the PRS1 BiPAP Auto is louder than the S9 VPAP Auto, when both machines are operating at same pressure.
The auto-adjusting ResMed AutoSet has no backup rate and has fixed EPR up to 3 (EPR is much like PS except is limited to a range of 0 to 3 cm H20) and does auto-adjust EPAP to avoid obstructive conditions like obstructive apneas, hypopneas, Flow Limitation and Snore. It is in the lowest insurance classification, along with standard non-adjusting CPAP machines. Fixed CPAP and auto-titrating APAP machines are the easiest class of machines to get health insurance to pay for, but the equipment providers may try to provide only the cheapest machines, since profit margins are much higher on non-auto machines and on machines without full data recording.
Machine choices:
http://www.apneaboard.com/wiki/index.php...ne_Choices
The Advisory Member group provides advice and suggestions to Apnea Board administrators and staff on matters concerning Apnea Board operation and administrative policies. Membership in the Advisory Member group should not be understood as in any way implying medical expertise or qualification for advising Sleep Apnea patients concerning their treatment.