Oscar chart. how to interpret? where are RERA? - Printable Version +- Apnea Board Forum - CPAP | Sleep Apnea (https://www.apneaboard.com/forums) +-- Forum: Public Area (https://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Forum-Public-Area) +--- Forum: Main Apnea Board Forum (https://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Forum-Main-Apnea-Board-Forum) +--- Thread: Oscar chart. how to interpret? where are RERA? (/Thread-Oscar-chart-how-to-interpret-where-are-RERA) |
Oscar chart. how to interpret? where are RERA? - Remmy - 11-12-2020 [attachment=28080][attachment=28079] Hello all I am still new to Oscar and trying to educate myself so I can look at these graphs and understand what im looking for. I know my. AHI is much lower w treatment so something is working (I started at AHI 32-37, RDi 19)....but still feel really crappy most day so lots of work yet to do here. I am super clear I must be my own advocate and keep trying. I have all the usual issues many folks here have. Why if the ahi is 'controlled' by pap use do I still feel all the same symptoms as before treatment (albeit a little less but thats not saying much). I especially hate the intense adrenaline rushes and heart palpitations. what is not being addressed? pressure not right? inhale v exhale etc. my questions to those smart ones here if you can spare a moment, I sure appreciate it: 1. What am I looking for on these graphs most days that would allow me to assess and/or tweak my treatment (I see the ahi and follow the curser to details which is cool-so well designed!) 2. What are flow 'limits',how do I find/monitor/change them and how they effect my treatment? 3. What specifically is causing the crazy adrenaline dumps? low )2 or failure to expel C02 properly due to poor pressure structure on pap 4. Iv been playing with the ERA (I have a air sense 10) somewhat but I dont know what it does...ie why would I have it at 3 v 1? 5. Do we want to have our pressure set with a wide window or narrow it to where we see we need it....ie stay just where you see your events are controlled? 6. I understand tidal volume in theory...volume in/volume out. how is it significant wrt apnea? In v OUT should be relative and/or equal? Is this where the RERA come into play....this may be an issue for me? are they connected to the apnea events or in addition to? 7. what is the clear airway component here refer to? OK thats enough alto I could go on lol!!! I know this is a work in progress and I am much better than I could/would be without treatment BUT not good enough. still major impact to my well being so thanks for your help!!!!!! I am so glad I found you all. xoxo PS. background: diagnosed 10 months or so ago-suffered and complained for about three years to dr before sleep study (take home). been really compliant since day one. been interacting with techs (kaiser), have a sleep dr referral for 6 weeks away and I want to be well informed with understanding so I can get the most out of my visit (and help myself!!) RE: Oscar chart. how to interpret? where are RERA? - SarcasticDave94 - 11-12-2020 (11-12-2020, 10:39 AM)Remmy Wrote: Hello all My answers are within the quote in bold blue. Hope it helps clear up some therapy mysteries. PS you may edit your PAP settings by yourself with no penalty here in the US. You do not need a new script, but doc and DMEs do need a new script to edit settings. On the EPR, you may add 1 if you so choose to get a bit of exhale pressure relief. But note your bit of CA purple flags. It's probably treatment emergent, so it should be on the downward path as you approach the 3 months mark. RE: Oscar chart. how to interpret? where are RERA? - Dormeo - 11-12-2020 One more thing about CAs to add to Dave's list. When we're awake, we often pause between breaths for 10 seconds or more. Our breathing while we sleep is generally much more regular. So if you're awake, or semi-awake during the night, any pause of 10 seconds or more is going to get a CA flag, because the machine doesn't know whether you're awake or asleep. If you're awake, the basic problem is you're awake, not that you're having a CA. Could you zoom down to two minutes on one of those CAs and post a screenshot? We might be able to learn a little more about what is going on. Ideally position the CA a little right of center so we can see the lead-in. Do you normally sleep for 6 hours per night? If so, do try sleeping longer. That could help you feel better during the day. I'm assuming those adrenalin dumps are waking you up. Next time you have one, reach over and turn your machine off for a little bit, then turn it back on. That way you can see where to look as you seek clues to what caused the problem. An even simpler way to flag the episode is to take a really deep breath and exhale really fully. You'll probably be able to see the big inhale/exhale on the flow rate graph. You could also deliberately cause a short large leak, though if that messes up your mask fit, don't. |