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Sleep Apnoea Forum Bringing Help + Support to the Patient

Welcome to our Forum - Feel Free to Introduce Yourself Here.

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

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Hi Everyone,

My name is John Wilkinson. I am 60 years old and I have recently been diagnosed with severe SA. I believe I have suffered for years with this condition. I am fairly fit and active and not overweight, but I do have an unusually thick neck and a 'crowded throat' . I have been a snorer for at least 35 years. However, over the last couple of years my condition worsened. I can 'snore the house down' when I am asleep - either in bed or in a chair and my partner was getting worried that I was stopping breathing many times when 'asleep' at night. My record apnoea was 28 seconds.

Over the years when I visited the doctors for chronic physical and mental fatigue  I was given every test possible and each time the results came back negative. I was even offered treatment for depression 3 times and once I was fobbed off with vitamin tablets. This made me feel very demoralised and even feel like I was a malingerer, which I am not. I have worked continuously for 40 years since leaving Uni.

However, salvation came when I moved and changed doctors. I was at a very low ebb - my concentration and memory had become really poor, I had no get up and go and I couldn't stay awake after tea time (although I NEVER felt tired  driving during the day time). I had an appointment with a young doctor and told him how I felt and his first words were, 'How do you sleep?' to which my reply was ' terribly'. He suspected I had sleep apnoea and referred me to a sleep clinic. His words were, as I left his room, 'It will transform your life if you receive treatment'. Why, in all my previous visits to the doctors, this simple question was not put to me I will never know. Maybe doctors need to be more aware of SA.

Now I am starting my treatment with my cpap machine. I am only in the first week of using it but surprisingly I am getting used to using it fairly quickly. I have a nose and mouth mask and have no problems with soreness or leaking. I do, however, get quite a dry mouth and throat still but I can put up with this. My night time visits to the toilet have halved and I am much less thirsty than I was. It is early days with the treatment and I know it will take a few more weeks before I feel any significant benefit but the main thing Is that I am in a positive fame of mind and optimistic that I will get my energy and mental sharpness back. Thank you for listening and letting me share my story.

Hi John - your story is so like mine except I am a woman.

I suffered all the symptoms you did,  but was dismissed by the doctor as having anxiety. I got to the stage where I dreaded the nights as I knew something was wrong,  but it wasn't until my husband literally took me to the doctors here in Germany that it was recognised - and instantly I might say -  by the doctor,  who arranged an appointment with a specialist.

After an overnight test proved I had severe SA I was then referred to a Sleep Clinic and subsequently was given a CPAP machine. It literally did change my life, I too was in a fog mentally and physically I was in a sad state.  I too took to using the CPAP easily and have never looked back in the year I have been using it.

As for the dry mouth I buy a Boots product called Expert Dental Dry Mouth Spray which I use before putting the mask on. I do find that helps and also I use a pure Sea Water nasal spray which clears my nose and helps too.

I am so glad you have finally been diagnosed and have got the treatment you so badly needed, and from now on I hope you feel a huge benefit physically and mentally. 

Best Wishes Karen Hamer

Hi John and Karen. Welcome to our forum to you both. Both your stories are similar to mine.....not overweight, yet diagnosed with severe sleep apnoea, although we now know it's no way linked to weight in many of us.  I too can trace my undiagnosed sleep apnoea back many years, even to childhood.  Oh and yes, I was regularly put on anti-depressants for anxiety, until finally the root problem was found!

Regarding the dry mouth, if you haven't got a CPAP humidifier with your machines, then it would be worth asking your hospital for one.  Meanwhile, the Xylimelts our charity sells are really good (see the reviews) as they can be used with our masks and keep the dry mouth away or much improved during the night http://www.hope2sleep.co.uk/xylimelts-dry-mouth-discs.html

Great you're feeling so positive John, as that's half the battle, and once you feel the benefits of your CPAP you won't want to sleep without it.

Best wishes to you both.

Hi Neil and welcome.  I 'hope' you finding us by accident will be the start of better health and a cease of snoring for you.  The CPAP machines are a prescription item, and you first need a referral from your GP to your local sleep clinic.  If you go to this link on our website, you can read about sleep apnoea and see if you can identify any of the signs and symptoms http://www.hope2sleep.co.uk/sleep-apnoea-information.html

Neil Jay said:

I found my way to hope2sleep really by accident and I don't know if I'm in the right place because I'm an appalling snorer and, having tried other options, CPAP seemed to be the next step. Maybe like others, I found it difficult to get coherent information about CPAP machines and if they could help me but, reading some of the information and comments here, I've already learned a lot.

If anyone can point this snorer in the right direction, I would be really grateful.

Regards from Gloucestershire.

Neil

You need to get an appointment at your local hospital's sleep unit. They will fit you with a sensor on your finger that you wear overnight to measure oxygen saturation and pulse rate. The results will show if you have sleep apnea. Then you can either go for a machine or try some other remedy for your snoring.

Gloucester Sleep Service

Neil Jay said:

I found my way to hope2sleep really by accident and I don't know if I'm in the right place because I'm an appalling snorer and, having tried other options, CPAP seemed to be the next step. Maybe like others, I found it difficult to get coherent information about CPAP machines and if they could help me but, reading some of the information and comments here, I've already learned a lot.

If anyone can point this snorer in the right direction, I would be really grateful.

Regards from Gloucestershire.

Neil

hi my name is Bob o'brien I am a newbie to the site. I have recently been diagnosed with sleep apnoea I have used the  monitoring machine that diagnoses it and have received a letter from the hospital to go on Monday 29th January to pick up a loan c pap machine. I am under the heart of England nhs trust and will be attending good hope hospital in Sutton coldfield. could any one tell me what to expect on this visit which they say will be 45 minutes, I also have an appointment the following day of the same length. and will i get my own machine eventually. also advice on when to advise DVLA with regard to my driving licence,  thanks Bob.

Firstly, you do not need to advise the DVLA until you have been diagnosed, unless you feel sleepy or can not concentrate at the wheel.  You also need to inform your insurance.

As far a your appointment goes, it looks like you have had a home test and they are going to do a test in hospital, an overnight study.  However, I do not know how this hospital works, some do home studies, some do a half and half i.e. they give you a machine home, then if you are suspected of having it, they will take you in for a night to do a sleep study.  Others will take you straight into hospital for an overnight study where they give you a room of your own, monitored by CCTV.  You would be connected to a computer with sticky patches to your head mostly to detect what stage of sleep you are in, a few elsewhere, a band round your chest to detect how well you are breathing and to see if you stop breathing.  Sometimes they have a small tube come from a mask that you have on so they can detect what you breath out.  You will have a mask on if this is done and a machine will be adjusted by nurse/doctors through the night and you will be closely monitored all night.

In the morning or some time in the future you will get your results and might even (if you are lucky) get a machine, mask, hose etc home with you to use every night.  It will take a bit of getting used to, but if you are determined to beat this you will use it every time you go to sleep.  Once you become compliant i.e. 5 hours minimum a night with 5 or less events a night DVLA will allow you to drive again.  They will suspend your license until you become compliant, however, they are not so bad as they used to be, at one time they took your license and you had a lot of trouble trying to get it back.  I could never understand this as it is the un-diagnosed driver that is the most dangerous driver, or the one that denies he/she has sleep apneoa!  A lot of things depend on how your hospital does things, if you are not sure, phone them, they are usually helpful enough.

Welcome to Hope2sleep.

many thanks that's very helpful I think I may have put my enquiry in the wrong place thanks for your understanding still getting used to the site sorry.

Hi Rob, Im in Wales so the hosptial arrangements are a little different. I had a home overnight test which confirmed the suspected diagnosis then they loaned me a machine that automaticall varies the pressure. finally they loaned me a machine that is of fixed pressure set right for me. I will say that the results were nearly immediate with me feeling so much better.

The consultant and the technician made it abundently clear that I MUST inform the DVLA at that time once I had a track record of good compliance of treatment. They strongly implied that were I to have an accident there was little chance that the insurance whould pay and a could face a criminal charge too.

I imformed the DVLA and recieved a form to complete, once returned the DVLA contacted my consultant to check my compliance (75% and above rings a bell, but I'm at near 100% having only missed two night cos aof a stinker of a cold) and my insurance. There was no additional premium and no restrictions on my driving.


Good Luck

many thanks Kevin it looks like I'm in for an interesting few months

Kevin Morgan said:

Hi Rob, Im in Wales so the hosptial arrangements are a little different. I had a home overnight test which confirmed the suspected diagnosis then they loaned me a machine that automaticall varies the pressure. finally they loaned me a machine that is of fixed pressure set right for me. I will say that the results were nearly immediate with me feeling so much better.

The consultant and the technician made it abundently clear that I MUST inform the DVLA at that time once I had a track record of good compliance of treatment. They strongly implied that were I to have an accident there was little chance that the insurance whould pay and a could face a criminal charge too.

I imformed the DVLA and recieved a form to complete, once returned the DVLA contacted my consultant to check my compliance (75% and above rings a bell, but I'm at near 100% having only missed two night cos aof a stinker of a cold) and my insurance. There was no additional premium and no restrictions on my driving.


Good Luck

Rob I imagine that you are like most of us were prior to treatment, ie. always shattered and in a brain fog.  For me the mask was and is an unpleasant feeling but it is far outweighed by the almost instant lifting of the fog and new energy.  Stick with it.

You have not said your age or whether you are married, but for me one incidental positive has been the ceasing of the snoring, which my wife appreciates a lot, and I no longer get the jab in the ribs.  The downside is the mask vents air in a constant draft. so if im facing her she gets a blast of cold air, which prompts a thump

hi Kevin yes I do snore a lot at the moment and can fall asleep if watching the television I am 65 and retired thankfully I am also diabetic so already have to manage a long term condition. because I am what's called a silver surfer i still have not got to grips with the working of the site and would find a help section if there is one helpful. i am not sure if i am starting a thread correctly any help would be appreciated. thanks bob.

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