I was diagnosed with severe sleep apnea which was mostly linked to the 170 hypopneas while sleeping on my back. During my sleep test I had 30 OSA and only 3 CA events. I have been able to treat the OSA with CPAP/APAP low pressures of 7.0 or thereabouts. I have attached charts for a fairly typical night using APAP 6.8-9.6 and CPAP 7.2.
I still occasionally have one or two 30 second OSA events during the night, but in general increasing my pressure tends to make my results worse. This is mainly due to treatment emergent (?) central events. In addition to this both my CA and OA tend to be worse with EPR enabled.
On paper I am considered "cured", but I am finding I am not getting restful sleep. I suspect I am getting aroused by the CA events. (I have recorded myself on camera and do see myself stirring, but it's difficult to determine what causes what).
During a CA event I often see the waxing/waning effect on the flow (see charts), I also occasionally see it during the night where there was no event triggered. Another effect I sometimes see is the flow rate gradually taper down over the period of an hour or so, then eventually 'hiccup' with an hypopnea back to normal levels.
Going through all the clinical guides, titration guides, forum posts etc my understanding is this would normally be treated with ASV if the CA AHI is above 5 (and LVEF>=45%). I have a couple questions regarding this:
- Is it still a good idea to treat CA<5 with ASV anyway and its only a question of cost, or are there other reasons to avoid it?
- Even though my CA index is 1.5 or so, I suspect it may be disturbing my sleep, I am also seeing other flow "weakening" effects - is this a good reason to use ASV?
- I understand using EPR makes CA events worse, so it's odd that bilevel would be used to treat CA. My understanding is that the bilevel aspect of ASV may actually make the body want to stop breathing even more - but the backup rate aspect of it ASV overrides this instinct by forcing breaths. This sounds like making a problem worse then fixing it by force and becoming dependent on the ventilation... Is this a fair assessment?
I should add that I have a secondhand machine in ASV mode that I am trialling and am finding it acceptable to use, albeit the pressures a bit high and getting some leaks. These ASV charts are posted here: https://imgur.com/a/QoFH6fd
Some questions on ASV:
- When using ASV mode I have a high degree of leaks, but I don't really notice them or get much of a dry mouth. My EPAP pressure is lower with ASV than when using APAP/CPAP. Are leaks normally such an issue with ASV?
- I am also not clear why the IPAP pressure auto raises to the maximum and spends most of the time up that high when I apparently only have low grade CA - I would have thought it would stay at the minimum most of the night.
- Could using a vAuto with appropriate settings give better results with less potential side effects?