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I agree completely with Daniel's take that a good sleep doc is important and this doesn't look like the kind of thing that is easily understood over the internet, let alone solved. Your medical history and overall health come into play in ways that can't be figured out, imo, as far as second-guessing what your doc may or may not have in mind. In the meantime, though, if it was me, I would at least find a way to be sure I was not sleeping on my back, and I would want oximeter proof that my oxygen saturation was being addressed sufficiently. In my opinion, your titration does not prove that, so I would ask about using an overnight recording oximeter for a few nights so the doctor can know how much oxygen is in your blood overnight.
Rock,
What you say is exactly how many titrate.
But I feel strongly about the application of the 2008 words of the AASM that "if continued obstructive respiratory events at 15-cm H2O of CPAP are documented during the titration study, the patient may be switched to BPAP." (Italics mine) That puts it in the realm of a call for the tech, in my opinion, and I think it is a given that 15 cm is uncomfortable for any patient starting out on CPAP, even if they might, eventually find a way to get comfortable with it. So I interpret "may" to mean that it is within the judgment of the tech to make that call as soon as 15-cm is reached, as far as the AASM is concerned, and that a tech may also make that judgment BEFORE 15-cm is reached "if the patient is uncomfortable or intolerant" at a pressure that feels high to the patient.
That is my interpretation, anyway, of the 2008 AASM statement 12:
"(12) If the patient is uncomfortable or intolerant of high pressures on CPAP, the patient may be tried on BPAP. If there are continued obstructive respiratory events at 15 cm H2O of CPAP during the titration study, the patient may be switched to BPAP."
http://www.sleepguide.com/profiles/blogs/titration-guidelines
As far as I am concerned, any patient who hits 15 cm has been judged by me to have failed CPAP. :-) But I understand if others do not see it that way, and I respect that.
jeff
Rock Hinkle said:jnk i am not in a place to verify, but it is my understanding that you must prove a failure of CPAP to innitiate BiPAP. This would nean that either the presence of true CSA or a CPAP titration pressure of 20cmwp that does not end events in adults. Children would fail cpap AT 15cmwp with continuous events. With that said the fact that he is on o2 tells me that bipap might be helpful, but i don't know what his diagnostic or titration stated.
the only thing shown in this data that's good is compliance, which is probably the only thing the pcp cares about. i would immediately start looking for a new sleep doc
j n k said:If you required more than 15 cm of pressure during your titration study, you should have been titrated for bilevel, according to my understanding of present accepted protocol.
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