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librarianbarbarian

librarianbarbarian
Joined Jun 2023
librarianbarbarian
Joined Jun 2023

My at-home sleep study showed some central apneas (some were likely transitional sleep-onset because I kept struggling to drift back to sleep after trying to claw the nasal cannula off my face). For obstructive events, it showed one apnea and all the rest were hypopneas. Both OSA and CSA were in the mild categories.

I recently got a pulse-ox recorder to monitor my own SpO2, and it frequently vibrates to alert me of low oxygen levels as I’m reading just before trying to fall asleep, which is another thing that makes me think some of the central events in my sleep study may have been transitional apneas. I usually have 1-2 segments of time in the night when my SpO2 bounces between 86-93 for a few minutes before returning to baseline.

I can’t do the any of the PAP-type machines that require masks. I can’t even put the mask on my face and the straps over my head without a panic attack. It didn’t matter which style I tried, it was the same result. Even just the nasal cannula during the study had me at the edge of panic all night. It took about 15 months before I could wear any kind of mask during Covid for more than 20 minutes in a row without a panic attack, despite following all of the advice to practice at home building up starting with just a few seconds at a time. By the time mask mandates ended, I still couldn’t go more than an hour before the rising anxiety reached a breaking point. The panic from anything touching my the front of my face originated from ptsd about 13 years ago; I had a sleep study soon after that showed no OSA or CSA, so I don’t think that panic is a result of the sleep apnea.

I just got a Bongo Rx to try since things poked in my nose don’t make me panic as long as there’s nothing pressing against the front of my face. I’ve slept with a wedge pillow for months. I wanted to do the sleep study with the wedge pillow to see what is actually happening during a night of sleep, but they told me that would be testing a treatment, not a baseline study. I also know that my SpO2 suffers when my allergies are worse. Other than treating allergies, using the wedge pillow, and trying the Bongo Rx, is there anything else I should be doing for the obstructive hypopneas? I currently live at high altitude and hope to move to lower altitude next year; the doc said that may help the CSA part. I know if I was using a CPAP, they could look at the data from that, or if I used a MAD, they would re-do a sleep study to see how effective it was, but since the Bongo has a complete seal with the nose, I don’t know how a re-study would work without the nasal cannula sensor.

I don’t have any daytime symptoms, so it’s hard for me to tell subjectively if anything is helping. With the wedge pillow, my husband says I’ve stopped snoring, but that’s the only feedback I have.