difference between ResMeds ASV Machines - 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: difference between ResMeds ASV Machines (/Thread-difference-between-ResMeds-ASV-Machines) |
difference between ResMeds ASV Machines - apneaguy - 02-19-2015 Getting new machine next month, after ASV tritation study. Does anyone know the difference or which machine would be the better option between ResMeds Aircurve 10 CS-A and the Aircurve 10 CS Pacewave? Thanks, ApneaGuy P.S. I want more of that..... Ya that... SLEEP! RE: difference between ResMeds ASV Machines - apneaguy - 02-20-2015 All set was able to find a great thread on this forum by vsheline. This helped explain a lot...... RE: difference between ResMeds ASV Machines - vsheline - 02-22-2015 (02-19-2015, 11:09 PM)apneaguy Wrote: Getting new machine next month, after ASV tritation study. Does anyone know the difference or which machine would be the better option between ResMeds Aircurve 10 CS-A and the Aircurve 10 CS Pacewave? Hi apneaguy, welcome to Apnea Board. I think the AirCurve 10 CS Pacewave is a non-USA model which is similar to the USA model AirCurve 10 ASV. I am not aware of any real difference between these two models, other than intended country of use. (Different countries will require different cellular modem types or frequencies.) I am not familiar with the AirCurve 10 CS-A model. I would suppose it will function similar to the S9 VPAP ST-A with iVAPS (intelligent Volume-Assured Pressure Support). Below is a link to the ResMed detailed brochure explaining ST-A iVAPS therapy mode: http://www.resmed.com/content/dam/resmed/global/documents/articles/1015529r1_ivaps-comprehensive-brochure_amer_eng.pdf The S9 VPAP ST-A is similar to an ASV machine operating in standard ResMed ASV mode (standard ResMed ASV mode has fixed manually-set EPAP), with the difference being that in ResMed ASV mode when a central apnea starts the Pressure Support will automatically self-adjust as high as needed in order to maintain 90% of the patient's own recent Minute Volume (the total volume of air breathed in one minute) but in ST-A iVAPS mode when a central apnea starts the Pressure Support will automatically self-adjust itself as needed in order to maintain a manually-set target Tidal Volume (the average volume of air breathed in or out, each breath) and a respiration rate of 15 breaths per minute. In ResMed ST-A iVAPS mode, EPAP is manually-adjusted and does not auto-adjust in order to minimize obstructive events, unlike the ResMed ASVAuto, standard bi-level Auto or AutoSet modes. Take care, --- Vaughn |