RE: Mysterious Arousals
your 2nd image is 404.
i don't have a lot to add but i suspect i have something similar going on. i need to scour my oscar waveforms for similar ones to yours; i didn't know how to read an arousal. i do know from somnopose + oscar that whenever i turn and fall back asleep, i have CAs. so it could be the case that i don't have any spontaneous arousals, as i usually only see the CAs in response to a position change.
RE: Mysterious Arousals
I have something similar: HR spikes associated with irregular breathing patterns, in spite of the fact that I successfully fine-tuned my treatment setting, leading to zero or close to zero AHIs.
RE: Mysterious Arousals
there should be a tiny edit button next to REPLY but it is possible it disappears after some time.
i still get 404 on your revised url...
RE: Mysterious Arousals
ok, i can see those. a couple of those seem similar to what happens to me. i start breathing thru my mouth and making plosive sounds. i'm not sure these are full-on apneas.
my sleep doctor thought that this sleep disordered breathing is directly leading to arousals, rather than an apnea causing a drop in o2 sat and an arousal to breathe again. i definitely woke myself all the way up as i was falling asleep with one of these in my last sleep study. for me, i'm still at the stage of initial CPAP use so i don't have any further info on alternative therapies other than what i've researched on my own. (bongo RX EPAP, iNAP)
maybe if you went to an ENT they could do that in-office sedation test where they put an endoscope down your nose and see exactly what is going on in your throat during these episodes. i need to convince my sleep doctor that i should have this done.
RE: Mysterious Arousals
I too bought an oximeter to see what exactly these events were doing to my oxygen. After all, that's one of the main reasons we put up with the PAP treatment, isn't it - because the "events" cause oxygen desaturation and that's bad for us?
Yet, like you, I am not really seeing any obvious correlation between PAP-marked "events" (OS, H, CA) and oxygen drops. My events are close to zero every night but my oxygen 'score' varies for no obvious reason from great to poor - from night to night and indeed hour to hour.
The main correlation I am seeing is between oxygen changes and arousals. In other words, most of the noticeable changes in my SpO2 graph - both up and down - coincide with an arousal (usually, but not always, without awakening). I guess that suggests some sort of positional obstruction is going on, though I'd expect that to affect what the CPAP machine sees in terms of flow restrictions and events - yet I don't think it does.
I have tried adding a camera to my overnight arsenal, to see if that might show me exactly what is triggering the arousals and the oxygen drops. I only used it once so far, and it stopped after a while, so there is still a lot of room for improvement of how exactly it does its job, but it already finally confirmed one thing for me. The frequent few-second 'blips' I see in the Flow Rate graph which are accompanied by a brief jump in the Movement chart and then a Pulse Rate spike are indeed arousals, as they coincide precisely with me briefly shifting position.
By the way, I synchronise the CPAP charts with the oximeter charts every night as soon as I get into bed with my version of the movie-maker's clapperboard - a large brief sniff accompanied by a quick twist of the wrist (the one containing the oximeter). The two events are easily seen on the charts, and I then use the "CPAP clock drift" setting to align them to within 1 second by adding or subtracting a few seconds.
In the absence of a camera, I use a similar technique to flag which side I am on whenever I wake up (in case that is a factor in the results).
So I'd now like to figure out (a) what causes the arousals and (b) what actually is affecting my desat level.