(12-01-2017, 05:56 PM)cbrts765 Wrote: Hello, do you want to say that for APAP mode best is to setup max to 20 and min to 0, i.e. fully rely that it will self adjust as needed?
No you might have reasons why you do not want it to go to too high a pressure. but for most people you can let the machine decide where it wants to be. I was at 18 on a CPCP machine. The hospital turned round and asked me what settings I wanted on the new APAP machine. Why do you think I would know, they are supposed to be the experts, not me.
So they decided to set it to 10 as a low pressure and 20 as the high setting. They said it would only go as high as it needed to go, which is right, provided there is not a leak. Even though the newer machines usually don't shoot up in pressure like the older ones. My mask came off the other night, the adjusting strap which is held with Velcro decided it didn't want to hold anymore. The machine rose in flow/pressure, then decided to drop down again. It was the noise of the air escaping that woke me up, so I just held the nasal pillows I was using in place and the machine dropped down what flow/pressure it had risen up to. I just held the mask in place and used the pillow to keep it there for a while. When my partners alarm went off I had a look to see what had happened, the Velcro had let go, so I looped it through and attached the Velcro strap again. So you can leave the machine open at full pressure and it will let you know what pressure it goes up to. Then you can limit it if you want to just above what it goes up to.
However, as I said there is on the odd occasion that you might not want to machine to go to high.
For most people it would not matter.
]The biggest problem people have is if you set the low pressure to low and the machine has to rise a lot in pressure to clear an event that you have, the rise in pressure will waken a lot of people, it is best if the low pressure is just high enough to head off most events, or at least keep a lot of then from becoming bigger events, then allowing the machine to rise and deal with other events as they happen. It is not quite that straight forward, but for Obstructive Sleep Apnea it is.
However, some people have other events such as centrals apneas so sometimes the pressure has to be adjusted to try to cut down on these, if that makes any sense.