Hojo pid='255840' dateline='1524529460']Is there any way to get in to see the doctor for just a few minutes, I did this and brought my laptop to show him my CA events. In doing so, it was important not to be aggressive but to kindly explain the problems and ask if he/she would be interested in what you are seeing on a daily basis. As soon as my doctor saw it I was given an appointment for ASV titration study.
As mentioned already, you most likely need to demonstrate compliance, in the USA we have to try CPAP, make at least one change to the machine, do a BiPAP study, if that 'fails', then an ASV study. When I met the compliance period and I just couldn't take the CPAP any more, I ended up staying on CPAP until my ASV study, but set my alarm clock every 2 hours.
By having my 'sleep' disrupted every 2 hours, I never went into a deep sleep where I may start experiencing more CA events, instead, I was able to get just enough rest but not experience the profound apnea (30-40 minutes a night). While I was still tired, I didn't feel the 'hypertension' as a result of the long periods of apnea.[/quote]
Hojo...
I take to heart your suggestion about taking the laptop in with me when I see the sleep physician...
but first I have to see my cardiologist/s (one private; the other through our public system for the hospital treatment of cardioiversion)...so I'm a few weeks away from that. At that private visit
I will establish if my heart's LVEF is above the 45% point, and that would clear the issue of suitability to use ASV for when I need to discuss my sleep problem with the sleep specialist from whom the prescription to use is needed.
I'm of the belief that the sleep specialist wants the Afib issue sorted before he tackles any change to his initial recommended 6-20 APAP settings, but I've tweeked that a little after 4 days of trying the idea put to me by Sleeprider without success, to currently 6-
18cmH2O, and EPR on Full Time and at maximum level 3. He agrees that the heart doctor/s will be the ones to best steer the sleep specialist in the direction of ASV, and has offered to provide research material to reinforce the argument I'll hopefully be putting to him...once the LVEF % is established.
Having understood what Sleeprider was offering, I'm sleeping better at present and the readings are better too...but I'm still experiencing all 3 types of apneas (OSAs; CAs and CSR periods). My oximetry reader hasn't arrived yet, but should be here this week I'm assured...so patience is the name of my game at present.
I have one question you may be able to quickly answer:
What do the numbers on the side of the pressure graph mean...
...the two in the middle in particular...
...in these examples attached?
Why are they changing in these two examples?
I'm presuming the 17 and 18 on the top indicate to what maximum pressure was reached...
...but the
8.3 and 12.7 as against
8.7 and 13.3?
Thanks
poppypete