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It this normal?
#1
It this normal?
Hi, newbie here.. Wink

Jun 28 my therapy has begun, and already have discovered that it will take a loooong time to get used to this. First of all, I'm very light sleeper who prefers to sleep on his belly, cannot sleep on my back so sleeping on the side are only option at this moment. Started with the nose pillows mask (Swift Fx) and it did not work out because no matter the humidity settings irritated my nose and also did not want to stay in place with what I call reasonable restrain.. So now I'm trying the full face (Mirage Quatro) So far I think I can live with it Wink.

Problem with all of it is the pulsating air pressure is keeping me awake. To deal with it I had to disconnect the mask so the ramp feature(45 min) be in affect and it lets me follow sleep. I wonder it there is anything wrong with this machine. I'm posting question here, betting that members forgot more about this than my current sleep technician knows. The equipment provider is Apria and so far dealings with them don't inspire much confidence.. Thank you.
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#2
RE: It this normal?
very common. This is all different. I still use ramp so I can get to sleep before the business starts. Not sure what you mean by pulsating air before you get to sleep. It should be pretty constant air pressure until you start having apneas and they only happen after you are asleep.

Might it be that you are fighting the air pressure and that is disturbing your breathing? If so try using the machine while you are watching TV or reading a book. Acclimate to the new feelings when you are not trying to fall asleep.
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#3
Cool 
RE: It this normal?
Thanks for your reply, By pulsating air, I meant during inhale the air pressure is not constant. Picture holding an vacuum cleaner hose and with palm of your hand fast tap on the end of it.. Big Grin
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#4
RE: It this normal?
The was the system works is that before you start to inhale the inside of the mask will be at therapy pressure. As you inhale you are lowering the pressure in the mask, so the system speeds up the blower unit to keep the pressure up. At the end of the inhale the blower will slow down to keep from over pressurizing the mask. The system will only change the blower speed (pulsing) if your inhale changes (or you are having leaks) .

The blower speed can change quite quickly and the pressure should remain pretty stable. It is electronics and can only do what it is designed to do.

We on the other hand react to all kinds of things. Have you ever had anyone blow air in your face and reacted to it? None of us are used to air blowing in our face while trying to relax and just breathe. It is not "normal", we can get used to it though. Every time we change our inhale the machine will detect it and react to it. The machine is trying to detect when we stop inhaling and if you trigger the machine into thinking that you have stopped it will adjust. If you then continue your inhale the machine will react to that also and faster then you can change your breathing. This can go back and forth changing pressure up and down causing you react to it, over and over.

Is it all in your head, well not really, it is happening. If the machines break, they usually just stop or get stuck wide open. Try putting the mask on with pressure and do some slow breathing. concentrate on controlling the rate of your breathing, slow and steady and see if the machine lets you alone and just follows you.
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#5
RE: It this normal?
Some machines have what they call a "flex" function. Maybe yours is turned on or adjusted in some way that you are noticing it. With that function, the machine senses your exhale and drops the pressure so you aren't exhaling against it. Then, they sense your inhale and jump back up to pressure. There are ways to turn this on and off, and ways to adjust the timing and pressure changes. This might be what you are feeling. On mine, I turn that function off and leave the constant pressure on the whole time.

And yes, they do make adjustments to maintain that constant pressure, too. With a full-face mask, there is a lot more air volume inside vs the nasal pillows you started with. The system might be making a lot of extra adjustments because of that. (I use the Swift FX myself).
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#6
RE: It this normal?
ResMed machines have EPR. It's a drop in pressure upon exhale. During inhale, pressure should be constant and not "pulsed."
Most people do better with a short ramp time; or with ramp off.

If there's a pulsing during inhale, make sure the entrainment valve in the Quattro elbow is acting normally (closed under positive pressure.)
And, make sure it's not water droplets shooting along the tube. Water may indicate the tank is too full; or the the humidity setting is too high.
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#7
RE: It this normal?
all good points justMongo
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#8
RE: It this normal?
Thanks to all who took the time to reply. That third night in a row I was awaken to a pulsing air during inhale. Trying different machine is my next step.Wink
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#9
RE: It this normal?
The machine should not feel like it is changing pressure or fluttering as you inhale. That description sounds like a defect. Make sure that the air-flow is not obstructed by water in the hose or humidifier water that is too high, or an improperly installed air filter. If you do feel a pulsing airflow have your supplier check the machine.
Sleeprider
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#10
RE: It this normal?
Not sure I mentioned this in my previous posts the reason I have switched from nasal pillows mask (Swift FX) to current one because of this problem. Checked all carefully including distilled water lever in the humidifier. All seems right. I agree with previous post,the machine my not work as it should.. Supposedly is brand new unit...

Hopefully I will be able to attach screen shot,and local guru interpret it so adjustment can be made.. I need get some sleep!
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