Hello Guest, Welcome to Apnea Board !
As a guest, you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use.
To post a message, you must create a free account using a valid email address.

or Create an Account


New Posts   Today's Posts

aerophagia
#1
aerophagia
Does anyone have any ideas that would help me with aerophagia? My wife is complaining because I am burping all the time.  I have looked on here and read about lifting my head up with my bed and that really helped with my centrals and hypopneas. I very rarely get obstructive but I get a lot of aerophagia.

Any other suggestions? My numbers are 12.4-17 and I usually fall about 13.5. I use a ResMed machine Auto.  At one time Dr. wanted me to switch to the machine that helps with Centrals but I kept putting him off and now my central run about 2 per hour. MY main problem is hypopneas. I was going to lower my pressure to try and help with the aerophagia but I don't want to increase my hypopneas.
Post Reply Post Reply
#2
RE: aerophagia
When I started on CPAP therapy. I had a problem with aerophagia (swallowing air). I tried antacids, simethicone to break up bubbles, different masks, sleeping positions, and playing around with pressure settings to balance my discomfort with an acceptable AHI and leak rate. None of this produced an acceptable result.

After much experimentation, what seemed to work for me was to use ResMed's EPR (expiratory pressure relief.) feature to reduce exhalation pressure. It appears that by not fighting against exhalation and swallowing air because of the effort, the issue resolved itself. My current settings are 12-15.6 with an EPR = 3. My AHI is sub-1 (normally 0.4 - 0.7) with a 14.6 (95%) pressure.

I do not know if this is a one-off that works only for me, but you might try it.
"The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." -- Marcus Aurelius
Post Reply Post Reply
#3
RE: aerophagia
I agree EPR can improve aerophagia, and we use it to treat obstructive hypopnea. I suspect your problem is actually a complex apnea, and your doctor was trying to have you try ASV at one time. Try using EPR to give exhale pressure relief, but understand this could increase hypopnea and CA events. If you do have complex apnea, you can reduce your minimum pressure to achieve comfort and better efficacy with centrals and hypopnea. The lowest pressure will be where OA starts to overtake CA as the predominate event.

Your profile shows you are using Sleepyhead. The current version of OSCAR is 1.2.0 and is available at the top of the forum. I recommend you upgrade and post some charts.
Sleeprider
Apnea Board Moderator
www.ApneaBoard.com

____________________________________________
Download OSCAR Software
Soft Cervical Collar
Optimizing Therapy
Organize your OSCAR Charts
Attaching Files
Mask Primer
How To Deal With Equipment Supplier


INFORMATION ON APNEA BOARD FORUMS OR ON APNEABOARD.COM SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS MEDICAL ADVICE. ALWAYS SEEK THE ADVICE OF A PHYSICIAN BEFORE SEEKING TREATMENT FOR MEDICAL CONDITIONS, INCLUDING SLEEP APNEA. INFORMATION POSTED ON THE APNEA BOARD WEB SITE AND FORUMS ARE PERSONAL OPINION ONLY AND NOT NECESSARILY A STATEMENT OF FACT.
Post Reply Post Reply
#4
RE: aerophagia
Hi Jerry,
Your Airsense 10 Autoset machine has 2 treatment modes:  Autoset/Standard response, and Autoset/Soft Response.  When I recently upgraded to one of this family of machines, I experimented and found that Soft Response works best for me, and my 95% pressure dropped more than 2cm.  The experiment is reported here:
http://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Thread-Product-Review-Migrating-from-S9-Autoset-to-Airsense-10-Comparing-Therapy-Modes

Any reduction in pressure is helpful for Aerophagia, so it would be worth your time to run the experiment.

Hope this helps
A.Becker
PAPing in NE Ohio, with a pack of Cairn terriers
Post Reply Post Reply
#5
RE: aerophagia
(12-03-2020, 01:34 AM)srlevine1 Wrote: When I started on CPAP therapy. I had a problem with aerophagia (swallowing air). I tried antacids, simethicone to break up bubbles, different masks, sleeping positions, and playing around with pressure settings to balance my discomfort with an acceptable AHI and leak rate. None of this produced an acceptable result.

After much experimentation, what seemed to work for me was to use ResMed's EPR (expiratory pressure relief.) feature to reduce exhalation pressure. It appears that by not fighting against exhalation and swallowing air because of the effort, the issue resolved itself. My current settings are 12-15.6 with an EPR = 3. My AHI is sub-1 (normally 0.4 - 0.7) with a 14.6 (95%) pressure.

I do not know if this is a one-off that works only for me, but you might try it.

I will try this but I was told it would increase my Centrals. right now mine EPR is one so I will try 2 for a while and see how that works out. Thank you for your time.
Post Reply Post Reply
#6
RE: aerophagia
(12-03-2020, 09:12 AM)Sleeprider Wrote: I agree EPR can improve aerophagia, and we use it to treat obstructive hypopnea. I suspect your problem is actually a complex apnea, and your doctor was trying to have you try ASV at one time.  Try using EPR to give exhale pressure relief, but understand this could increase hypopnea and CA events.  If you do have complex apnea, you can reduce your minimum pressure to achieve comfort and better efficacy with centrals and hypopnea. The lowest pressure will be where OA starts to overtake CA as the predominate event.

Your profile shows you are using Sleepyhead. The current version of OSCAR is 1.2.0 and is available at the top of the forum.  I recommend you upgrade and post some charts.

I have switched to Oscar when it came out but have not put it on my profile. Sorry about that. Also right now I start at 12.4 but it goes up very quickly. So I was wondering if it goes up fast if reducing the minimum pressure would help. I will try the suggestion one at a time and let you know the results.
Post Reply Post Reply
#7
RE: aerophagia
(12-03-2020, 06:01 PM)becker44a Wrote: Hi Jerry,
Your Airsense 10 Autoset machine has 2 treatment modes:  Autoset/Standard response, and Autoset/Soft Response.  When I recently upgraded to one of this family of machines, I experimented and found that Soft Response works best for me, and my 95% pressure dropped more than 2cm.  The experiment is reported here:
http://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Thread-Product-Review-Migrating-from-S9-Autoset-to-Airsense-10-Comparing-Therapy-Modes

Any reduction in pressure is helpful for Aerophagia, so it would be worth your time to run the experiment.

Hope this helps
Post Reply Post Reply
#8
RE: aerophagia
(12-03-2020, 09:12 AM)Sleeprider Wrote: I agree EPR can improve aerophagia, and we use it to treat obstructive hypopnea. I suspect your problem is actually a complex apnea, and your doctor was trying to have you try ASV at one time.  Try using EPR to give exhale pressure relief, but understand this could increase hypopnea and CA events.  If you do have complex apnea, you can reduce your minimum pressure to achieve comfort and better efficacy with centrals and hypopnea. The lowest pressure will be where OA starts to overtake CA as the predominate event.

Your profile shows you are using Sleepyhead. The current version of OSCAR is 1.2.0 and is available at the top of the forum.  I recommend you upgrade and post some charts.

your right about the centrals, but they have redused quite a bit. Now I might git about 5 a night.
Post Reply Post Reply
#9
RE: aerophagia
(12-04-2020, 01:08 PM)jerry1967 Wrote: I have switched to Oscar when it came out but have not put it on my profile. Sorry about that. Also right now I start at 12.4 but it goes up very quickly. So I was wondering if it goes up fast if reducing the minimum pressure would help. I will try the suggestion one at a time and let you know the results.

Jerry, it is fairly common for flow limitation to be associated with CA events. Unfortunately, individuals sensitive to EPR and pressure support will have a lot of problems treating flow limitation without making the CA worse.  It is flow limitation that causes any Resmed auto CPAP to increase pressure.  As long as flow limitation is present, it will try to increase pressure to the maximum setting allowed.  It is in cases like this that we intentionally limit the maximum pressure so the machine does  not "run-away".  In these cases we use pressure to manage obstructive apnea, and we balance pressure against CA and aerophagia as needed.  A reduction in minimum and maximum pressure may help your comfort without increasing OA events, and it may actually improve CA events.
Sleeprider
Apnea Board Moderator
www.ApneaBoard.com

____________________________________________
Download OSCAR Software
Soft Cervical Collar
Optimizing Therapy
Organize your OSCAR Charts
Attaching Files
Mask Primer
How To Deal With Equipment Supplier


INFORMATION ON APNEA BOARD FORUMS OR ON APNEABOARD.COM SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS MEDICAL ADVICE. ALWAYS SEEK THE ADVICE OF A PHYSICIAN BEFORE SEEKING TREATMENT FOR MEDICAL CONDITIONS, INCLUDING SLEEP APNEA. INFORMATION POSTED ON THE APNEA BOARD WEB SITE AND FORUMS ARE PERSONAL OPINION ONLY AND NOT NECESSARILY A STATEMENT OF FACT.
Post Reply Post Reply
#10
RE: aerophagia
By reducing these numbers will that affect my Hypopnea numbers. Sleeprider?
Post Reply Post Reply


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
Question Is this Aerophagia? It's ruining my ASV therapy Unkikonki 0 186 10-29-2024, 06:39 PM
Last Post: Unkikonki
  Aerophagia - Gassy - 5+ months now apneavolt 2 374 10-14-2024, 09:43 PM
Last Post: RedNailz
  First night - aerophagia issues kanikami 8 512 10-13-2024, 10:05 PM
Last Post: Sleepster
  New to CPAP - Aerophagia? LFS9000 5 398 10-02-2024, 10:58 AM
Last Post: G. Szabo
  Bad Aerophagia - Help cyberfiche 4 448 09-22-2024, 01:50 PM
Last Post: cyberfiche
  ASV with Oxygen Drops, leaks and aerophagia redking2436 7 515 09-20-2024, 10:47 AM
Last Post: Jay51
  My solution to aerophagia with CPAP manacles 7 457 09-04-2024, 11:39 AM
Last Post: croc


New Posts   Today's Posts


About Apnea Board

Apnea Board is an educational web site designed to empower Sleep Apnea patients.