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Good Morning Claudette! Well I guess it is about my lunch time anyway. Unfortuanately I can not tell you anymore about the unit you have. jnk and Judy have way more knowledge on this particular machine than I do. I find myself reading their responses to you and just nodding in aggreement. I would be more than happy to help you interpret your report though. Post your questions here or PM me. I will follow the post.
Which Resmed mask do you have?
Good Morning Claudette! Well I guess it is about my lunch time anyway. Unfortuanately I can not tell you anymore about the unit you have. jnk and Judy have way more knowledge on this particular machine than I do. I find myself reading their responses to you and just nodding in aggreement. I would be more than happy to help you interpret your report though. Post your questions here or PM me. I will follow the post.
Which Resmed mask do you have?
AND, an interesting phrase I never noticed before that is of particular significance to MY situation:
The pressure reported in the Efficacy Data submenu for a single session is the 95th centile pressure for mask-on time, excluding periods when the leak has exceeded 0.4 L/s (24 L/min).
VT = tidal volume = the volume of air inspired or expired in one respiratory cycle (breath)
MV = minute ventilation = volume of air breathed in (or out) w/in any 60 second period
RR = respiratory rate = the frequency of breathing, expressed as the number of breaths per minute
None of them are of any importance to you, at least not at this point, and most likely won't ever be. The definitions are just to satisfy your curiosity.
Press = 95th percentile = the value exceeded during the selected range for 5% of the time - or to put it another way, the pressure AT OR BELOW which you spent 95% of the night.
jnk!!! We NEED YOU to explain, w/the IPAP at 20 and the EPAP at 7 and the PS at 4, WHAT is the IPAP range allowed, and the EPAP range allowed?? That gap between 20 and 7 is too big a range, isn't it? Isn't the accuracy lost if the PS is greater than 10? Or is it that the PS can't be set greater than 10?
I'll have to go check the Clinicians Manual again. I'm thinking that her provider has set her Resmed as he/she would a Respironics.
Yeah Judy your mouth leaks were setting you back with the simplicity.
Claudette yours is a classic apnea case. As I learned with my 9 year old daughter treating the apnea is only half of the battle. Apnea can actually make your sleep habits worse. Prior to having her toncils and adnoids removed she was waking up 2-3 times a night. Despite the surgery fixing her apnea (for now) she continued the bad habits. It took me almost 6 months to turn he sleep around. Now Kylie is only 9. Her bad sleep habits were very few years in the making. I do not know how old you are, but I would be willing to wager that your bad sleep habits are at least 10 years in the making. It might take you sometime to unlearn the bad sleep habits that your life has taught you.
Bad sleep hygeine and anxiety can be a very interesting combination. I consider myself OCD with an ADD rising. Meaning I do not think anything was aligned when I was born. Stars, planets nothing! I have found that the closer it gets to bed time the more anxious I get about things I have not finished. To solve this problem I make a list of everything I have to do for that day. I give myself a certain time frame to finish this list. Typically for me if I have not finished my list by dinner it gets moved to tomorrows list. This leaves after dinner time for relaxation, kids, and my wife. God forbid she does not get her time LOL! The hardest part for me was accepting that sometimes I will not get everything done.
I have found that I am a clock watcher. This was a huge discovery for me as far as my anxiety goes. If there is a clock in the room I will check it every five minutes. To alleviate this problem my wife and I have made it sort of an effort to find out what time it is. We only have one wall clock in the house. Every other clock has a button or some other act that has to be done to see it. Call it laziness if you want, but I do not clock watch near as much. This simple act has made my days and NIGHTS go a little smoother.
@ Judy,
With those numbers, the 20 is the highest IPAP can go, the 7 is the lowest EPAP can go, and the delivered pressures will always be 4 cm apart at any given moment. Good standard setup, in my opinion, if that keeps AI below 1.0 most nights.
The IPAP range with that setup is 11 to 20 and the EPAP range is 7 to 16. The upper limit doesn't matter much unless the pressures are running away. Starting the night at 7/11 makes sense. The delivered IPAP and delivered EPAP is always PS-distance apart. Whoever set that machine up knew what they were doing, in my opinion.
I don't like PS set higher than 6 on that machine, myself. And hers is at 4, the most common setting. That is good. One day months down the road, she and her team might find that another number for PS might lower her HI. But, like I said, that really doesn't matter right now.
@ Claudette,
Judy is giving you VERY good answers. She has a gift for putting things in a very understandable way.
@ Rock,
You crack me up, man.
Take good care o' that family!
jeff
Claudette,
You have to train you brain and body to sleep by being consistent in what you expect. You start dimming the lights in the evening and giving clues to your body and brain that it is time to start winding down as the evening goes on. Then, by the time you get to bed, your brain is ready to sleep.
It is natural for your nervous system to dread sleep if it spent years learning that it had to gear up to startle you awake every few minutes just to keep you alive at night. It doesn't have to do that anymore. So you have to help it calm down as it unlearns that. Give it time. You can help it learn that by developing a set time for sleep and a set time for being awake.
If you have gone through life changes and have emotions to work through, one of the best things you can do is to get enough in-bed time, where the rule is you aren't allowed to think about those things there to give yourself a break from it and heal. If need be, you set aside time early in the evening to sit in a chair away from your bed to think about things calmly. Then when you go to your bed, if those thoughts start to creep back, you laugh at your brain for doing that and lovingly remind it that it isn't allowed to think about it when you are horizontal, that you already thought about that stuff in the chair earlier. It is kind of like lovingly house-breaking a pet. You have to be strict with your brain or it will keep doing the same things. But you have to be gentle with it, too, so you don't discourage it or get it upset. It is an organ. It belongs to you. It is your job to train it. It pays off, because you don't have to go around cleaning up after it. :-)
Well, enough of my pop-psych babble. I hope you sleep well tonight, Claudette.
jeff
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