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While I agree with you that how you feel is most important, I do also feel that some will benefit from a more careful scrutiny of the numbers. You are lucky. You felt better after three days of treatment. I didn't have the overnight "trip to Lourdes" that some others have. Elsewhere on the board, I asked how long it took to feel better. I didn't "calculate" the responses, but my general sense was that about 25% ish of the responders felt better right away...for the rest the range was anywhere from a few weeks to a year.
I'm one of the many people who is starting to feel better very gradually sometimes taking minute baby steps. I have good days and not so great days (an improvement over bad days and worse days). As a result, I feel that it is important for me to review the numbers and make sure that my 100% compliance to the therapy is resulting in AHI's and leaks and whatever else it allows me to review that will put me in the best position of continuing my slow but positive trend in how I feel.
I'm not doing this in a vacuum though. Just yesterday I had a phone consultation with my sleep doctor (and an in person meeting with him last week where we reviewed status together) to discuss next steps. (No one's ever called me low maintenance ;-) Both of us think that in addition to the apnea situation which appears to be getting into control through the therapy, that I have other sleep issues. As a result, I will be setting up a meeting with a behavioral therapist to discuss sleep hygiene and whatever else comes along with that. By eliminating a high AHI, and all the other goodies you can see through the reports, and combining that with a discussion of sleep habits and problems, a picture was painted that leads us to explore behavioral issues that goes beyond CPAP therapy. Without the numbers, trying a dozen different masks probably would make no difference since there seems to be multiple issues here with my sleep-- and I am loving my mask, it's in the right range of leaks etc :-)
In the big picture of "how do I get to feeling good" I feel that I have a toolbox. The numbers are an important part of my arsenal of tools...but just one tool. My sleep doctor, this forum, friendships I have made with people who are knowledgeable about sleep disorders, my primary care physician...etc. are all part of that tool box that I need to manage this condition.
I really wish I was one of those people, as you have been, who felt like a changed person overnight. There are times when I would get angry and sad that it wasn't working for me in the miraculous way is has for some others. In the first week or two, I woke up every morning "willing" myself to feel great and becoming disappointed when I didn't. I'm now resolved that this is going to take much more work and management from me...and I am going to need all of the tools available...especially the numbers...to help me get through to the other side on this.
Steven B. Ronsen said:The numbers are unimportant - it's all about how you feel.
I recently replaced my almost ten year old dumb CPAP machine with a fully data-compatible machine.During that long period, I had no objective feedback, but I felt rested after my third night on CPAP, when I got the right mask. (It's all about the mask!)
Well, the new machine simply confirms this. After a month of recording numbers, my average HI is 1.2, and more importantly, my average HI is less than 0.1, (that's an AHI of 1.3) and I still feel rested.
Back to the original question, my numbers are pretty consistent. AI varies for 0 to 0.1 with on 0.2 on one night. HI varies from 1.0 to 2.1. I suspect that the HI numbers are affected by mask removal resulting from my chronically runny nose or conscious shallow breathing when trying to fall asleep.
Nevertheless, I just ordered a card reader to look at my data in more detail. Why? When my primary care physician thinks it's time for another expensive sleep study, I want to show him that's it's not necessary. I doubt any additional analysis will improve my treatment - my numbers are pretty close to optimal.
I didn't intend to belittle anyone's efforts. Perhaps I made an exceptionally easy adjustment to CPAP. I've never been a mouth-breather. Leaks have always been totally disruptive of my sleeping, and I don't need a machine to tell me when I'm leaking. Perhaps that's a benefit of a nasal-pillow mask - there's nothing subtle about their leakage. (Not meaning to rub it in, my leak rate is consistently zero.)
My point is that one should not obsess about numbers, particularly when starting. Focus on finding the most comfortable mask for you. That's not necessarily the most popular or highest rated one. I find the most popular nasal-pillow mask painfully uncomfortable and leaky. Don't worry about using a nasal mask with a stuffed nose. That can be dealt with separately. I'm amazed at the number of people who think that a full-face or hybrid mask is necessary to accommodate such possibilities, only to saddle themselves with inherently uncomfortable and leaky masks.
DME's mark-up equipment with VERY high margins. Don't hesitate to get your money's worth by trying as many masks as necessary to find comfort. One or two nights is all it takes to determine if you've made the right choice. If you can't forget you're wearing it within an hour or so, it's not the right selection and you will never be relaxed and comfortable enough to adapt successfully to CPAP treatment. Once you get a comfortable mask, everything else will follow, including low numbers. On the other hand, if the mask isn't right, you'll be plagued with leaks and sleep interruptions.
I may have forgotten the details of my adjustment and it may have been a bit more difficult than I remember, but be encouraged that at some point you will adapt and the whole CPAP thing will become a minor inconvenience in your life. You will feel uncomfortable even napping without your mask and machine.
Best of luck.
Jan said:While I agree with you that how you feel is most important, I do also feel that some will benefit from a more careful scrutiny of the numbers. You are lucky. You felt better after three days of treatment. I didn't have the overnight "trip to Lourdes" that some others have. Elsewhere on the board, I asked how long it took to feel better. I didn't "calculate" the responses, but my general sense was that about 25% ish of the responders felt better right away...for the rest the range was anywhere from a few weeks to a year.
I'm one of the many people who is starting to feel better very gradually sometimes taking minute baby steps. I have good days and not so great days (an improvement over bad days and worse days). As a result, I feel that it is important for me to review the numbers and make sure that my 100% compliance to the therapy is resulting in AHI's and leaks and whatever else it allows me to review that will put me in the best position of continuing my slow but positive trend in how I feel. I'm not doing this in a vacuum though. Just yesterday I had a phone consultation with my sleep doctor (and an in person meeting with him last week where we reviewed status together) to discuss next steps. (No one's ever called me low maintenance ;-) Both of us think that in addition to the apnea situation which appears to be getting into control through the therapy, that I have other sleep issues. As a result, I will be setting up a meeting with a behavioral therapist to discuss sleep hygiene and whatever else comes along with that. By eliminating a high AHI, and all the other goodies you can see through the reports, and combining that with a discussion of sleep habits and problems, a picture was painted that leads us to explore behavioral issues that goes beyond CPAP therapy. Without the numbers, trying a dozen different masks probably would make no difference since there seems to be multiple issues here with my sleep-- and I am loving my mask, it's in the right range of leaks etc :-)
In the big picture of "how do I get to feeling good" I feel that I have a toolbox. The numbers are an important part of my arsenal of tools...but just one tool. My sleep doctor, this forum, friendships I have made with people who are knowledgeable about sleep disorders, my primary care physician...etc. are all part of that tool box that I need to manage this condition.
I really wish I was one of those people, as you have been, who felt like a changed person overnight. There are times when I would get angry and sad that it wasn't working for me in the miraculous way is has for some others. In the first week or two, I woke up every morning "willing" myself to feel great and becoming disappointed when I didn't. I'm now resolved that this is going to take much more work and management from me...and I am going to need all of the tools available...especially the numbers...to help me get through to the other side on this.
Steven B. Ronsen said:The numbers are unimportant - it's all about how you feel.
I recently replaced my almost ten year old dumb CPAP machine with a fully data-compatible machine.During that long period, I had no objective feedback, but I felt rested after my third night on CPAP, when I got the right mask. (It's all about the mask!)
Well, the new machine simply confirms this. After a month of recording numbers, my average HI is 1.2, and more importantly, my average HI is less than 0.1, (that's an AHI of 1.3) and I still feel rested.
Back to the original question, my numbers are pretty consistent. AI varies for 0 to 0.1 with on 0.2 on one night. HI varies from 1.0 to 2.1. I suspect that the HI numbers are affected by mask removal resulting from my chronically runny nose or conscious shallow breathing when trying to fall asleep.
Nevertheless, I just ordered a card reader to look at my data in more detail. Why? When my primary care physician thinks it's time for another expensive sleep study, I want to show him that's it's not necessary. I doubt any additional analysis will improve my treatment - my numbers are pretty close to optimal.
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