RE: What would you do in this situation?
Hi dugdale,
I’m not sure how this works in your country. Since there is no cost to you, it sort of sounds like they could take the machine back.
You seem unsure as what to do. I would try to sleep without for 2 or 3 days. I think it would become clear to you if you need Cpap therapy or not. I have a feeling you won’t be feeling so great after a couple days.
If they give you a choice, I think you should keep the machine. If they take it back, you may have to finance your own machine. Like I said, a few nights without would tell the story.
Good luck.
RE: What would you do in this situation?
I think HalfAsleep has hit on an important point. The AHI only measures the number of apneas and hypopneas. It doesn't mention the duration. Five 10 second apneas an hour is not bad at all. Five 60 second apneas will cause substantial problems. So you need to interrogate the sleep study report to see what's going on regarding durations.
In general, I concur with the advice above - don't volunteer to return the machine, hang on to it as long as possible. You could (on the QT) try a week without the machine to see how it goes, but I suspect you'll find you sleep and live better with the machine than without it.
11-11-2017, 10:13 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-11-2017, 10:19 PM by HalfAsleep.)
RE: What would you do in this situation?
Could you use the machine with relaxed pressure for a few days so you can still record the night on Sleepyhead? Then you can analyze your sleep quality when the machine isn't giving you treatment.
Since I'm a newbie, I have no idea how to set the machine so it would record the night on the SD but not give you treatment, but I'm sure someone will have an idea.
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Also, I think you might want to check the waveforms on Sleepyhead. The software will highlight your events, but not your "almost events". You could be struggling with every other breath and never know it until you look at your flow.
Also, I'm guessing, look at the SleepyHead chart that shows flow limit. You may not be having full fledged events, but still have impediments to easy breathing.
RE: What would you do in this situation?
I would also recommend keeping and continuing to use your machine. Even if you have mild apnea, you will still end up tired and exhausted over time. If your AHI had been 5 or less, then yes, you could consider abandoning the usage.
RE: What would you do in this situation?
Hi dugdale,
First of all, CONGRATULATIONS! on your weight loss.!
Why give up the therapy if you don't have to? Try to keep the machine, if you can't, get one of your own to continue on with the therapy.
I wish you good luck on your decision.
Hang in there for more suggestions.
trish6hundred