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I am glad to hear that you are feeling better. This is the most imprtant effect of sleep therapy. Personally I would not worry about it. My wife however is OCD and would have to get the machine checked out.
Many antidepressants tend to reduce the amount of REM sleep that you get. It may be that your sleep apnea happens mostly during REM and with the reduced REM you are having less apneas.
Be careful of the long term effects of reducing REM via Zoloft. Some people become very tried out because if it after a while.
Zoloft is an SSRI
http://www.drugs.com/zoloft.html
SSRI reduce REM
REM is where you would see the most severe apneas (due to lowered muscle tone)
Ergo: Zoloft ARTIFICIALLY reduces overall AHI thru its reduction in REM.
How do you find out what your AHI is ?
Well, I take Zoloft and it hasnt afffected my REM as far as I can tell - but I dream quite a bit - soem features of narcolepsy in my sleep - and it isnt as though you can time yourself while sleeping/dreaming without EEG. I have to check my machine and see if I can tell AHI.
Anxiety also makes me very drowsy (more so than the antianxiety meds, ha ha)
On the down side, even with treated OSA I still sleep way too much.
One of the most irritating features about modern life and linguistics is the tendency to use abbreviations, usually capitals. Mostly this is used within small groups as a code language. Sometimes I can fathom out the meaning. But AHI beats me.
Could someone explain? ASAP lol!
I didnt know either so I googled it and it was the first hit.
Also there is www.acronymfinder.com where it is also the first entry and has a link
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