New? Free Sign Up
Then check our Welcome Center to a Community Caring about Sleep Apnea diagnosis and Sleep Apnea treatment:
CPAP machines, Sleep Apnea surgery and dental appliances.
Tags:
Charley, I strongly suggest that you contact your sleep doctor or sleep lab and request a copy of 1] the doctor's dictated results (1-2 pages each) AND 2] the full scored data summary report w/condensed graphs (5+ pages each - also called "full disclosure report) from BOTH your in-lab sleep evaluation PSG AND your in-lab titration PSG as well as 3] a copy of your equipment order (prescription). They are part of your medical records and as such you have a LEGAL RIGHT to them under HIPAA. I'm guessing you have more going on than just plain old vanilla obstructive sleep apnea.
Very few people are scripted a bi-level right from the get-go w/o good cause. MOST insurances insist that you fail CPAP therapy before they will pay for a bi-level except under certain quite stringent circumstances and usually involve a lot of communication and verification and Letters of Medical Necessity and what not to get them to pay for a bi-level right from the get-go. And a bi-level auto! YOU are fortunate! Are you going to be able to keep this device or is there a good chance you will be switched to a straight bi-level w/in the month?
Congratulaltions on getting 5-6 hours sleep w/your VPAP Auto 25 already!
The Resmed VPAP Auto 25 was released in January 2008. The VPAP Auto 25 was released in July 2008. I've never been able to get a good answer from our local Resmed Rep WHY the Auto 25 followed the release of the VPAP Auto so soon. I have the Clinicians Manual for both my VPAP Auto and for the VPAP Auto 25. The VPAP Auto's Clinicians Manual (not the Users Manuel patients are given) is so much more comprehensive that the VPAP Auto 25's Clinicians Manual .... I'm curious as to WHY that is too. The 25's Clinicians Manual is ..... no where near as explanatory as the VPAP Auto's. I've only glanced thru the 25's Clinicians Manual so am not sure of all the differences between the two but they appear to be fairly minor other than my VPAP Auto's maximum is 20 cms rather than 25 and some minor differences in LCD screen data sequences, info, etc.
Charley K, I say good for you for getting on the forum with your questions.
Sounds to me like the sleep lab treated you aggressively and appropriately.
If those are the only two numbers given, it looks to me like your doc ordered APAP (an autotitrating machine, not a bilevel) with the minimum set at 8 cm H2O and the max at 25 H2O. That's my guess, anyway. If the Rx doesn't say specifically "BiPAP" or "Bilevel" on it somewhere, it is not a bilevel Rx. It would be an extremely rare thing for an OSA patient to be prescribed bilevel with a spread larger than 6 cm, I believe.
Your doc is smart not to prescribe the minimum at 4, like so many docs do. Starting at 8 or so is usually best, from what I've read on the boards.
I'm not a pro, just a fellow patient whose life was saved by PAP therapy and helpful forum members.
© 2025 Created by The SleepGuide Crew.
Powered by