(scroll down to the questions if this is too long)
I seem to have sleep transitional central apnea and significant dips of me O2 % are freaking me out. They are not obstructions - as when I look at my flow rate in OSCAR it just shows a gradual loss of flow to flat line, and then a gradual increase back to normal breathing ( if I don't wake up during the event).
I honestly don't know how long I've had this, but now I am VERY aware of it due to my new Wellue O2Ring. The desaturations are associated with rises in pulse rate and drop in flow rate so I'm inclined to think these are not sensor glitches. I'm not really sure how low the SPo2 will go during these CA's (my alarm is waking me up at 90%) but for sure into the 80's sometimes. These dips absolutely are acute in that they rebound to normal levels once breathing smooths out. Average spo2 is 97 during sleep and 98-99 during the day.
Basically what's going on is I have my O2 alarm set to go off at 90% with the idea that if it goes off, it will wake me up so I can take some deep breaths to bring my Sp02 back up - which it does nearly immediately.
It does NOT happen every night, but maybe 60% of the time it does to some degree. When I do get desats during transition that AREN'T low enough to trip the alarm, it repeats usually 2-4 times and then my breathing and o2 levels smooth out.
But no definition of what a significant desaturation is so that's a rather subjective statement in the context of the article.
note: This is currently happening with AND without the cpap in play for me.
Question: How bad is it really to get a periodic desat into the 80's that maybe lasts 10-20 seconds below 90%, but the rest of the night I'm generally above 95% with my cpap and/or dental appliance working?
Everybody says below 90 is worrisome. Well, mission accomplished - you got the guy with health-anxiety worried.
Question: Does anybody else here monitor their O2 desats during wake/sleep junk? What are your lows like?
Question: Am I letting my anxiety get the better of me? Should I turn off the alarm all together and just ignore the sleep/wake junk regardless of how low my O2 levels get? - Because right now this is interfering with me actually getting to sleep due to the alarm going off at 90%.
About me:
I am right at the beginning of my OSA therapy journey. Within the last month I have gotten a dental device that works really well, combined with nasal strips and flonase, I probably wouldn't even need CPAP for my OSA with these, but I have also just received a cpap and am about two weeks into that therapy.
Longterm goal is surgical solutions for nose and throat ( I have HUGE tonsils so lookin at getting those and adenoids out along with some sort of nasal surgery to open my nasal airway) but I'm also considering going the extreme route and doing Double Jaw surgery.
I get health anxiety (which is why I'm making this post)
Male - 44 - BMI 20 - don't exercise.
recent good EKG
recent good cardiac exercise stress test
recent CT scan of lungs - normal
I have had a history of mild OSA for last 10 years - untreated as the sleep doctor wasnt worried about my numbers during lab sleep study 10 years ago.
Last year or so OSA had gotten worse - new sleep study in lab show mild-moderate OSA and warrants treatment. No mentions of CSA in the labs.
Currently starting CPAP therapy (2 weeks on Airsense 11). Prescribed pressure is 6. Trying to NOT use EPR. Nasal mask.
BUT also have a new Mandibular Advancement Device for sleeping at night which also works well. Using breath-right nasal strips which seem to help with nasal airway resistance.