(12-13-2018, 08:21 PM)Sleeprider Wrote: I think a lot of people have an opinion of what they think the stent is or its discomforts. In this thread, there is one person that has used it and knows. That it grosses you out, or you imagine it to be uncomfortable is not helpful. Keep an open mind, and listen to experiences. This is how we progress, and solve problems.
Well, yeah, but the one person who knows (mikekw) also
said "it was a terrible feeling" and "it isnt something I can see myself adapting and getting used to unfortunately", so what can we gather from that?
In the other recent thread on this, I objected to it on principle, but my reason there was that the OP just didn't like CPAP and couldn't get used to it. What I was thinking, and I'm sure this has been discussed before, is that in a case where there is no physiological reason not to use CPAP, maybe psychotherapy of the strictly analytical kind (I mean psychoanalysis but no drugs or ECT or lobotomy or imprisonment, please) could help to overcome that phobia.
If there's some kind of well-founded medical reason not to use CPAP and to go for a stent as an alternative, I can see it, maybe. But if it's only that "It's CPAP that grosses me out!", well ... why not try to deal with that fear, and fix it? Can millions of us happy pappers be wrong?
P.S.: Especially when the tube seems to be even more outrageously overpriced than a CPAP machine!