The data you've posted looks EXCELLENT. As in your CPAP therapy is about as close to optimal as you are going to get it, regardless of how much "tweaking" and "tinkering" you do from here on out.
In other words, at this point, you need to focus on what makes you most comfortable when you are in bed and what gives you the best sleep you can get in terms of factors that are NOT related to your OSA/CPAP therapy.
Hydrangea Wrote:I double checked. A-Flex is ON. And I recently moved it down to 1 (from 2). I guess I didn't feel 2 was doing a good job of getting rid of the Hs.Your current settings have all but wiped out the Hs, along with everything else. It is unrealistic to expect an AHI = 0.0 every night. Your data shows that your AHI is consistently below 1.5, and often below 1.0. What do you think reducing your already extremely low AHI is going to do in terms of how you feel during the daytime?
You also write:
(03-21-2017, 10:16 PM)Hydrangea Wrote: I recently put my min pressure down from 7 to 6, to see if it might help decrease my daytime ear pain. (Time will tell.) I also decreased my exhale support...Two comments:
1) Tweaking to reduce the daytime ear pain is worth it. Has reducing your min pressure to 6 done anything in terms of the ear pain?
2) Decreasing the exhalation relief setting may be increasing the ear pain. My advice is to set the Flex at whatever setting makes you most comfortable, both when you are trying to get to sleep and during the daytime. If I were facing this problem, I would see if increasing the exhalation relief helps with reducing the daytime ear pain.
Quote:I also decreased my exhale support because I'm a tinkerer, and to see if it may help reduce the Hypopneas (I felt like I was getting too many). (I don't know if I gleaned that somewhere, or made it up.)There are people who claim that when exhalation relief is set too high that it creates problems. Some claim it causes CAs. Others blame exhalation relief for excessive numbers of residual Hs.
But your AHI is so low that it is unlikely that increasing Flex from 1 to 2 or 3 will increase your AHI significantly.
Seriously: How many Hs are you seeing in your data? And why do you feel like you are "getting too many Hs"?
Quote:Here's last night's screenshot. I bought a buckwheat pillow from Amazon, and WOW my body didn't move all night! I was on my back for quite a while. Then I moved to my side - either when the events started, or maybe that caused the start of events??Your events are well separated in time, you have no clusters of events, and you averaged less than 1 event per hour.
Even a person with totally NORMAL sleep has a few isolated apneas and hypopneas now and then.
In other words, you're making a very large mountain out of a very small molehill when you start trying to figure out "what caused the start of the events" on a night where your AHI is 0.83.
Quote:And then throughout the more wakeful AM hours (thanks to dogs, kids, husband, etc.) I tossed and turned, alternating back and side sleeping.You can't blame restless sleep caused by dogs, kids, the husband, etc on inadequately treated OSA. If the tossing and turning during those "more wakeful AM hours" is causing you to feel less than rested when you do get out of bed, then the fix is dealing with finding a way to minimize the external sensory stimuli (dogs, kids, husband). All the tweaking in the world of your PAP won't stop the dogs, kid, and husband from disrupting your sleep in the early AM.
Quote:But when I slept, between my faux tempurpedic mattress and this awesome pillow, I did not move!Comfort is the important thing now. Sounds like the mattress and the pillow combo is working exceptionally well.
But I will add: Not moving at all during the night can lead to its own set of problems: Lots of times an arm, shoulder, leg, hip, or back will develop mysterious "aches" if you stay in the exact same position all night long when you sleep. Some movement while sleeping is normal.