Welcome to the Hope2SleepGuide Forum, which is a service run by the Hope2Sleep Charity founded by Kath Hope with a marvellous team of trustees and volunteers.
Kath herself has severe sleep apnoea and hypoventilation/hypercapnia, and has used CPAP for several years and is now on non-invasive ventilation. Our trustees and volunteers are all either sufferers of sleep disordered breathing or clinicians/medics working in this field, and most importantly, we are all passionate in supporting (with empathy) others and raising awareness to help people live healthier and more energised lives.
Whilst we do not give medical advice, more often than not, with support, tips and knowledge, people can overcome any problems experienced with our therapy, and there is a whole page dedicated to this on the website http://www.hope2sleep.co.uk/tips-for-problems-sleeping-with-cpap-or...
Please come and join us, and don’t feel obligated to use your ‘real’ name if you prefer to remain anonymous as this is a public forum. Don’t be shy in posting and sharing, as we’re all in this together and to help each other.
Best Wishes for good sleep!
Kath
Tags:
Good evening to you all,
I am a new member here, and I am very pleased to have found this forum.
I have been using a CPAP machine for over four years now, and I have accepted the situation and have managed to get used to it.
At the start I was very resentful of the young man who caused the car accident which caused me to need to use the CPAP machine again, after I had been lucky enough to have successful nasal surgery to eliminate the blockages in my nasal passages and allow me to breath clearly again.
I hope that I can contribute something to the forum and help others to improve the quality of their sleep, and thus improve their lives.
Best wishes from Cornwall.
HM
Only just seen your post Hugh, so a belated welcome to our forum, and sorry to hear it was a car accident needing you to go back onto CPAP. On the plus side it's good you feel you can contribute to others as we're all in this together.
Hugh Mattos said:
Good evening to you all,
I am a new member here, and I am very pleased to have found this forum.
I have been using a CPAP machine for over four years now, and I have accepted the situation and have managed to get used to it.
At the start I was very resentful of the young man who caused the car accident which caused me to need to use the CPAP machine again, after I had been lucky enough to have successful nasal surgery to eliminate the blockages in my nasal passages and allow me to breath clearly again.
I hope that I can contribute something to the forum and help others to improve the quality of their sleep, and thus improve their lives.
Best wishes from Cornwall.
HM
Well i finally made it here..thanks for all the help and advice fromKath who has been a great help.I used my philips cpap machine last night for the first time with full facial mask.Slept without having to get up once after sleeping 9 hours 15 minutes.Prior to using the cpap i had to get up atleast three times a night to use the loo often finding it difficult to drop of again.My AHI 4 weeks ago on my sleep test was 22.38 this morning it was recorded at just 3.3 ....is it really possible for such a difference on the first night.. Its always nice to hear from others as i have been suffering for over a year now with a very high anxiety level .. also often very tired are these common symptoms....along with a tight chest and often had to gasp for air very frightening..
Hi again Frankam and was glad to be of help and reassurance. I was speaking with one of your nurses earlier and told her of your great overnight success, and she was really pleased. The nurses aren't here on the forum but they are in the FB group. Hope night 2 goes well.....
frankam said:
Well i finally made it here..thanks for all the help and advice fromKath who has been a great help.I used my philips cpap machine last night for the first time with full facial mask.Slept without having to get up once after sleeping 9 hours 15 minutes.Prior to using the cpap i had to get up atleast three times a night to use the loo often finding it difficult to drop of again.My AHI 4 weeks ago on my sleep test was 22.38 this morning it was recorded at just 3.3 ....is it really possible for such a difference on the first night.. Its always nice to hear from others as i have been suffering for over a year now with a very high anxiety level .. also often very tired are these common symptoms....along with a tight chest and often had to gasp for air very frightening..
Those adrenaline shots when you stop breathing and your brain wakes you up can certainly send you dashing to the loo. CPAP worked for me too (diagnosed 2008). Great night's sleep on night one, and only got better.
frankam said:
Slept without having to get up once after sleeping 9 hours 15 minutes.Prior to using the cpap i had to get up atleast three times a night to use the loo ... .is it really possible for such a difference on the first night..
An update here tonight is my 6th night with the cpap...The first night was great slept solid,however the last three days i just could not sleep solid was awake about every hour.The next day i was here falling asleep in front of the computer and felt tired onwards..My machine is set from 4 rising to ten.When it reaches ten i find it to strong for me.Can i reduce this to say 6 at Max starting at 4 .Can anyone advise me thanks...
Frankam, you're with a very good sleep clinic who remotely check and monitor your therapy so please don't try to adjust any settings. If the machine needs to go up to a pressure of 10 it's because that pressure is needed to treat the apnoeas. It's not uncommon for a few teething problems to come up after the 1st night, as on that 1st night you will have been so sleep deprived that you slept through all the pressure changes. Sometimes, just a little perseverance is needed to get used to the pressure changes which eventually don't wake most of us up. If you give your clinic a call they'll access your data and see if anything needs altering which they will do at their end.
frankam said:
An update here tonight is my 6th night with the cpap...The first night was great slept solid,however the last three days i just could not sleep solid was awake about every hour.The next day i was here falling asleep in front of the computer and felt tired onwards..My machine is set from 4 rising to ten.When it reaches ten i find it to strong for me.Can i reduce this to say 6 at Max starting at 4 .Can anyone advise me thanks...
Hi
I have been using xPAP fo around 15 years and have never really for it to work for me. I am joining this forum with eh aim of getting my AHI below 5.
I have been using a Respirinicas Comfort Gel nasal mask for a long time now and it is well overdue to switch to another mask.
So my first task is to do that and the two main candidates are either the wisp or the ResMed Mirage FX.
Other than that I have been told elsewhere that I probably need an ASV machine but at the moment I'm using BiPAP.
Co-morbidity makes my case extra complex and hard to treat. I have also been diagnosed with Periodic Limb Movement Disorder, and in the closing year (hopefully) of a five-year long taper from Clonazepam, a med that was prescribed to treat my PLMD, with disastrous results.
As I say, as far as CPAP goes if I can get my AHI below 5 (and preferably as close to 0 as possible) then that will be as much as CPAP can do for me.
Hi. I was diagnosed about 3 years ago with severe sleep (45 AHI). I'm 63, fairly active and only slightly overweight. My AHI came down to 9 after about 12 months and I get about 7 hours sleep a night. Despite their best efforts my clinic has not been able to get my AHI down below 9. Usually, I get up to go to the toilet after about 3.5 hours and usually get back to sleep quite easily. I use a Philips Dream Station and a full-face mask and I am predominately a mouth breather. Even though my AHI is down to 9 I still get early morning brain fog and fatigue. Recently my condition has gone back to my pre sleep apneoa diagnosis - brain fog, fatigue and falling asleep during the day. I have had blood tests which have come back negative. I've not been able to get to the sleep clinic because of the covid pandemic. Has anybody had any similar experiences? Has anybody got any advice to give me in the absence of not being able to get to my sleep clinic?
Hi Crabbleite
I can't speak for the Resmed Mirage FX, but we've sold the Wisp for years at the charity and our site has all 5 star reviews. The DreamWisp is the newest version with the difference being the hose comes out of the top of the mask and to be honest I prefer masks with the hose at the top like the DreamWear range (I use the DreamWear full face as I'm a mouth breather).
Well done on tapering off the Clonazepam if it wasn't helping you.
Regarding your higher AHI, there can be lots of reasons for this, but it's also worth considering if you definitely ONLY breathe through your nose during sleep as that could cause a higher AHI. Also though the fact you say you may need ASV could also be part of the reason.
Crabbleite said:
Hi
I have been using xPAP fo around 15 years and have never really for it to work for me. I am joining this forum with eh aim of getting my AHI below 5.
I have been using a Respirinicas Comfort Gel nasal mask for a long time now and it is well overdue to switch to another mask.
So my first task is to do that and the two main candidates are either the wisp or the ResMed Mirage FX.
Other than that I have been told elsewhere that I probably need an ASV machine but at the moment I'm using BiPAP.
Co-morbidity makes my case extra complex and hard to treat. I have also been diagnosed with Periodic Limb Movement Disorder, and in the closing year (hopefully) of a five-year long taper from Clonazepam, a med that was prescribed to treat my PLMD, with disastrous results.
As I say, as far as CPAP goes if I can get my AHI below 5 (and preferably as close to 0 as possible) then that will be as much as CPAP can do for me.
In one way John, bearing in mind your AHI was 45 on diagnosis, 9 is very good, although if you're still experiencing the brain fog and tiredness etc., it's a pity the clinic haven't managed to get it lower despite them trying. Sometimes when people are on auto CPAP (APAP) and have the minimum pressure raised that often helps, although I'm sure your clinic have tried that. It would be good to know if you still had those symptoms with an AHI of 5 or below because then you'd know if they're linked to your sleep apnoea or not. I say this, because when people have an AHI of <5 and still have symptoms we advise they get blood tests for vitamin D or B12 deficiency, thyroid and diabetes - all of which are linked with sleep apnoea and cause the same symptoms. It would still be worth having them done if you haven't.
John Wilkinson said:
Hi. I was diagnosed about 3 years ago with severe sleep (45 AHI). I'm 63, fairly active and only slightly overweight. My AHI came down to 9 after about 12 months and I get about 7 hours sleep a night. Despite their best efforts my clinic has not been able to get my AHI down below 9. Usually, I get up to go to the toilet after about 3.5 hours and usually get back to sleep quite easily. I use a Philips Dream Station and a full-face mask and I am predominately a mouth breather. Even though my AHI is down to 9 I still get early morning brain fog and fatigue. Recently my condition has gone back to my pre sleep apneoa diagnosis - brain fog, fatigue and falling asleep during the day. I have had blood tests which have come back negative. I've not been able to get to the sleep clinic because of the covid pandemic. Has anybody had any similar experiences? Has anybody got any advice to give me in the absence of not being able to get to my sleep clinic?
Kath Hope said: “...but it's also worth considering if you definitely ONLY breathe through your nose during sleep as that could cause a higher AHI...”
Crabbleite, maybe you are one of the relative minority like me, who find that with CPAP you physically cannot breathe through your mouth (or even talk) when the machine is on. Indeed, for the first 15 years or more I thought that was how the thing worked - i.e. if your mouth is closed you no longer snore, job done. Also like you my AHI would not go below five, whatever the clinic or I tried in the way of settings. A combination of things have worked for me, with AHI now 1-2, occasional zero. These were:
1. Sleeping position - stay on side as much as possible.
2. Pressure - fixed at 8.5 works for me (I was sceptical when the clinic nurse said try fixed rather than auto, but it’s true. Fixed 8, fixed 9 or 8-9 auto are all less effective)
3. Change in blood pressure meds. This was the single biggest AHI reducer for me. But the sleep clinic won’t accept it (preliminary investigations in the US seem to support my experience though)
4. Mask - the latest F&P Evora nasal mask records a measurable drop in AHI compared with any of the numerous others I have used.
Hope this may help, but with the caveat that I am far from the typical OSA patient, though I can’t be unique.
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