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Thanks for the response. I’m taking my temperature orally & have wondered if the air from the CPAP mask is simply cooling down my mouth as drinking a cold drink would do. I’m going to contact my doctor on Monday & in the mean time I’m going to purchase either an ear thermometer or temporal scanner to see if those temperature readings match up with the oral thermometer readings.
I read a post made by another member that was apparently made around 4yrs ago which is why I joined this forum but I couldn’t figure out how to comment on his post so I’m creating this one.
Recently I’ve noticed that when I use my CPAP at night my temperature drops extremely low & tonight it actually went to (91.1) & as I understand it (95) is the beginning of hypothermia & (92) & below is extremely dangerous.
Now I don’t feel cold & I don’t experience any of the symptoms of being cold such as shivering so I’m wondering if the machine is simply changing the air temp in my mouth the same way drinking something cold would or if it’s actually lowering my body temp to dangerously low levels.
Any information or thoughts on this would be much appreciated.