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I am on day 106 of APAP and am quite happy with my progress. Had a concern about CA events early on but they seem to have settled down. The OA events have almost been eliminated. Many thanks to Gideon and others for their advice.
Something peculiar happened last night in that I had a single, long OA that woke me. It was somewhat alarming! I am curious as to what might have caused this and wondered if anyone has any insight or similar experiences.
I noticed your O2 only dropped 3 minutes later. Even after your OSA cleared your flow limitations persisted, you were at Max pressure of around 12.8/13 so machine could not go higher.
My own O2 hardly ever drops even with OSA of 40 seconds, unless there is a large cluster, so I don't bother using oximeter anymore. (I have no lung conditions.)
Hello Stacey,
Thanks for your reply. It was not long after falling asleep and I was on my back - normally I switch to my side just before drifting off. OAs are worst when I am supine but normally are handled well with the machine. Have never had one this long (47 seconds) and it felt like my airway had been welded shut!
Dave H
That AHI (0.67) is one of my better ones - am averaging about 2.0 which is mostly CA events. I am happy with the numbers but I have work to do towards reducing the number of times I wake and the delays of getting back to sleep.
As mentioned, this OA (47 seconds) seemed unusual. I woke pretty much at the end of it which actually does correspond to the O2 drop as my AirSense unit loses time and was about 2+ minutes behind the oximeter. I don't think I have any serious lung conditions and am reasonably fit. Most nights my O2 averages about 96 and the low is about 92 with very few drops over 3% or 4%. I think this is okay but would be interested to hear of others experience.
My concern about this event is fueled by imagining my airway seized shut somehow!
I have the max pressure set to what seems just sufficient to handle most OAs and hypopneas. With my early concerns about CA events and possible "treatment emergent central apnea", I seem to recall a recommendation to minimize the differential between the min/max pressures.
I am hoping this OA was a one-off and that similar events do not reoccur very often! If not then I will try increasing the max pressure.