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Anoyone have CPAP experience?

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  • Anoyone have CPAP experience?

    I've been scheduled for sleep study to determine if a CPAP would benefit me. I am reluctant to pay the > $600 portion my insurance won't pay and am concerned about the bulkiness of the unit to begin with.

    Anyone with experience with these units and their effectivness/comfort???
    Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

  • #2
    Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

    Originally posted by indygeezer View Post
    I've been scheduled for sleep study to determine if a CPAP would benefit me. I am reluctant to pay the > $600 portion my insurance won't pay and am concerned about the bulkiness of the unit to begin with.

    Anyone with experience with these units and their effectivness/comfort???
    I have a lot of experiance with CPAP but not for the same reasons.

    We use CPAP's quite a bit for severe CHF patient's and DNR pt's. that we can't tube.

    As for the reasons you are using it, we have one guy who uses it at night.

    He has told me in the past that initially it bothered him but now he can't sleep without it.


    Basketball isn't played with computers, spreadsheets, and simulations. ChicagoJ 4/21/13

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

      Yes, what do you exactly want to know? I have sleep apnea and have a CPAP.

      The units are pretty small now. Not very loud either. The wife complained about my snoring previously (without it) and with it, she doesn't hear me at all. I have noticed a significant improvement in my sleep quality since starting CPAP.

      It takes a little getting used to at first, but once you do, you'll have a hard time going to sleep without it. There are multiple types of masks that one can choose from. I'd get one with a humidifier on it.

      During my initial sleep study, I had apnea events 42 (average) times per hour, so it was pretty severe. They stopped halfway through and put me on a CPAP during the study.
      Last edited by Stryder; 03-29-2011, 09:21 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

        I dunno, this just looks impossible to deal with http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_airway_pressure


        The wife says my apnea is much less than it used to be and really can't recall the gasping happening in a long long time. Snoring and falling asleep at the drop of the hat is still a problem.

        I still boast that I can stand up, close my eyes, and be asleep within 3 minutes.....it's not a lie.

        I do have drowziness while driviing and have fallen asleep (always waking up safely...once in the wrong lane of traffic on a two lane road but that was years ago) This is almost always on a bright cloudless afternoon, esp. mid-afternoon and envolves a drive of an hour or more.

        Most of my symptoms can be alleviated by avoiding a high carb diet. Atkins diet works great for me in this case. I used to always doze off during afternoon meetings, but not since I quit eating french fries and white breads at lunch.
        Last edited by indygeezer; 03-29-2011, 10:06 PM.
        Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

          I have one of the new CPAP machines and they are pretty compact and quiet. Also makes a ton of difference in my quality of life. I almost forgot how it felt to be rested and alert.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

            Originally posted by indygeezer View Post
            I dunno, this just looks impossible to deal with http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_airway_pressure


            The wife says my apnea is much less than it used to be and really can't recall the gasping happening in a long long time. Snoring and falling asleep at the drop of the hat is still a problem.

            I still boast that I can stand up, close my eyes, and be asleep within 3 minutes.....it's not a lie.

            I do have drowziness while driviing and have fallen asleep (always waking up safely...once in the wrong lane of traffic on a two lane road but that was years ago) This is almost always on a bright cloudless afternoon, esp. mid-afternoon and envolves a drive of an hour or more.

            Most of my symptoms can be alleviated by avoiding a high carb diet. Atkins diet works great for me in this case. I used to always doze off during afternoon meetings, but not since I quit eating french fries and white breads at lunch.
            If you are still having some sort of apnea events, you need to have it checked out and truly diagnosed in a sleep study. The drowsiness and falling asleep while doing normal activities is a symptom of the quality of sleep that you are currently getting WITH your apnea events.

            I seriously doubt it is due to diet. You can't blame falling asleep while driving on that. Talk with a doctor and he'll/she'll tell you that's a severe sign of something that is occurring.

            By the way, I snored really bad too, but I also had the falling asleep problem. I could sleep anywhere, at any time, in any situation, and did quite often when visiting family, sitting down for short periods of time, watching TV, etc. That doesn't happen any longer.

            I can't say this enough. Get it checked out!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

              I was scheduled for the test last evening but they called on Monday to ask for a credit card to charge my 20% not covered by insurance to. BTW...my 20% = $623.00

              At that point I decided to do some investigating. Just how much does this thing cost and can I mitigate that cost. And if I'm going to pay it, is it effective if I don't have apnea just snoring and light sensitive eyes?

              I postponed the test 1 week just so I can get informed.
              Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                If you're falling asleep while driving I'd say you either have sleep apnea or you have narcolepsy. It it was me I'd get the sleep study done and hope it's sleep apnea.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                  Originally posted by grace View Post
                  If you're falling asleep while driving I'd say you either have sleep apnea or you have narcolepsy. It it was me I'd get the sleep study done and hope it's sleep apnea.

                  I had a sleep study 14 years ago. At that time they said light/moderate apnea, not dangerous. The wife says I have mcuh less problem now than then.
                  Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                    Originally posted by indygeezer View Post
                    I was scheduled for the test last evening but they called on Monday to ask for a credit card to charge my 20% not covered by insurance to. BTW...my 20% = $623.00

                    At that point I decided to do some investigating. Just how much does this thing cost and can I mitigate that cost. And if I'm going to pay it, is it effective if I don't have apnea just snoring and light sensitive eyes?

                    I postponed the test 1 week just so I can get informed.
                    No other way to mitigate the cost other than insurance. I spent a little more than that out of pocket on my sleep study (when including the doctor's charge, etc.).

                    Please don't rely on your wife's opinion on the matter, unless she is a medical doctor certified in the area of sleep medicine.

                    Again, as has been previously mentioned, IF you are falling asleep while driving (and it seems as if you have done so in the past), then you NEED to have this done. A $600 - $1200 charge is better than falling asleep at the wheel and injuring someone (or yourself) for life...

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                      Oh I'm having the study if for no other reason than the Dr. says that with CPAP I can expect Blood Sugar and Blood Pressure levels to drop almost immediately. And he won't order other treatments unless I am doing this (I almost fired him when he said that).
                      Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                        It works wonders, when I am on it regularly I am only on one blood pressure med now when I am sporadic I am on 2.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                          The following may have absolutely nothing to do with what you are experiencing, but I hope it at least is food for thought.

                          My wife uses a CPAP. She was resistant to getting a sleep study done, and had one that was not effective about 15 years ago because she literally couldn't sleep under the conditions of the study. However, about 5 years ago, she had a successful sleep study that was conclusive and reluctantly accepted the fact that a CPAP machine would help her. She has used it ever since and doesn't like to sleep without it. She can sleep without it at times when absolutely necessary (away from home where no outlets are near the bed and we happen to have forgotten to bring an extension cord), and she doesn't snore a lot without it now, but she doesn't sleep nearly as well and she feels the impact the next day when she doesn't.

                          That said, have you been losing weight and been very thirsty and going to the bathroom a lot more than you used to, especially after having eaten a lot of carbs?

                          I am not a doctor, but I am diabetic and so is my wife. I can vouch for the fact that significantly high blood sugar readings can lead to exactly what you have experienced in that I and my wife have had exactly the same thing occur after eating either white carbs / starches such as white bread and almost any kind of potatoes, pizza (the crust is generally based on white flour) and also dairy products (due to lactose being a sugar) like milk and real cheese. The fact that you have also correlated a way that you eat that reduces blood sugar spikes (Atkins) and seems to be controlling these symptoms is also indicative that you may have some sort of blood sugar problem. I believe that quite a few more people have at least some issues with blood sugar than ever actually get diagnosed as being diabetic, whether it be due to not getting routine blood tests with the frequency needed to actually determine if there is a problem, or their doctor simply not having enough direct experience to recognize the possibility of blood sugar issues (whether it be diabetes, hypoglycemia, or a less recognized condition called reactive hypoglycemia where the blood sugar never actually gets low, but the crash from blood sugar being very high to a more normal level happens quickly enough that the body believes it is about to become low and overadjusts accordingly).

                          Also, based on what I have read of your posts here, stress has been quite high in your life for some time now (as it should be given your circumstances) and high stress tends to increase blood sugar as well due to the body's stress response. Under stress, the body produces adrenalin in an effort to generate the energy required to satisfy its "fight or flight" response to stress. This, in turn, ends up leading to a release of glucagon from the liver which leads to the additional blood sugar increase, and in people with blood sugar problems it is often beyond what the pancreas can effectively and efficiently counter with its insulin production response.

                          From what I have been able to figure out from personal experience and reading, if the body experiences this blood sugar spike in a sedentary position (regardless of what is actually going on around you, including being at loud concerts or driving and no matter how bright the light happens to be), for whatever reason, the body then believes that it no longer is actively fighting or fleeing and then produces whatever hormones are generally utilized to balance against the effects of the stimulant hormones, often way more than necessary, leading to inappropriate "sleep" (really more or less losing consciousness), which, in myself at least, is often accompanied by later waking up with an elevated heart rate and a mild headache which subsides fairly shortly after regaining full consciousness.

                          That is not to say that sleep apnea is not (or was not) an issue also, and if you have been losing weight during the period that the snoring has been improving it may well be (or have been when you would have weighed more) an issue because often times sleep apnea is worsened by being significantly overweight.

                          I would get both of these checked out, but don't discount blood sugar problems as potentially being at least part of the issue. What you describe is exactly why uncontrolled or poorly controlled diabetics are not permitted to have Class "A" CDL's for driving large trucks. If blood sugar either gets high and stays high, or conversely gets very low, bad consequences ranging from poor reaction time and decision-making all the way to the "falling asleep" that you describe can occur, and that leads to a very dangerous situation for those who drive professionally as well as anyone else in their vicinity as they continue to drive.

                          I hope this has helped you more than it has scared you, and you may well already be familiar with most of it. Best of luck in getting things figured out!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                            Originally posted by Brad8888 View Post
                            The following may have absolutely nothing to do with what you are experiencing, but I hope it at least is food for thought.

                            My wife uses a CPAP. She was resistant to getting a sleep study done, and had one that was not effective about 15 years ago because she literally couldn't sleep under the conditions of the study. However, about 5 years ago, she had a successful sleep study that was conclusive and reluctantly accepted the fact that a CPAP machine would help her. She has used it ever since and doesn't like to sleep without it. She can sleep without it at times when absolutely necessary (away from home where no outlets are near the bed and we happen to have forgotten to bring an extension cord), and she doesn't snore a lot without it now, but she doesn't sleep nearly as well and she feels the impact the next day when she doesn't.

                            That said, have you been losing weight and been very thirsty and going to the bathroom a lot more than you used to, especially after having eaten a lot of carbs?

                            I am not a doctor, but I am diabetic and so is my wife. I can vouch for the fact that significantly high blood sugar readings can lead to exactly what you have experienced in that I and my wife have had exactly the same thing occur after eating either white carbs / starches such as white bread and almost any kind of potatoes, pizza (the crust is generally based on white flour) and also dairy products (due to lactose being a sugar) like milk and real cheese. The fact that you have also correlated a way that you eat that reduces blood sugar spikes (Atkins) and seems to be controlling these symptoms is also indicative that you may have some sort of blood sugar problem. I believe that quite a few more people have at least some issues with blood sugar than ever actually get diagnosed as being diabetic, whether it be due to not getting routine blood tests with the frequency needed to actually determine if there is a problem, or their doctor simply not having enough direct experience to recognize the possibility of blood sugar issues (whether it be diabetes, hypoglycemia, or a less recognized condition called reactive hypoglycemia where the blood sugar never actually gets low, but the crash from blood sugar being very high to a more normal level happens quickly enough that the body believes it is about to become low and overadjusts accordingly).

                            Also, based on what I have read of your posts here, stress has been quite high in your life for some time now (as it should be given your circumstances) and high stress tends to increase blood sugar as well due to the body's stress response. Under stress, the body produces adrenalin in an effort to generate the energy required to satisfy its "fight or flight" response to stress. This, in turn, ends up leading to a release of glucagon from the liver which leads to the additional blood sugar increase, and in people with blood sugar problems it is often beyond what the pancreas can effectively and efficiently counter with its insulin production response.

                            From what I have been able to figure out from personal experience and reading, if the body experiences this blood sugar spike in a sedentary position (regardless of what is actually going on around you, including being at loud concerts or driving and no matter how bright the light happens to be), for whatever reason, the body then believes that it no longer is actively fighting or fleeing and then produces whatever hormones are generally utilized to balance against the effects of the stimulant hormones, often way more than necessary, leading to inappropriate "sleep" (really more or less losing consciousness), which, in myself at least, is often accompanied by later waking up with an elevated heart rate and a mild headache which subsides fairly shortly after regaining full consciousness.

                            That is not to say that sleep apnea is not (or was not) an issue also, and if you have been losing weight during the period that the snoring has been improving it may well be (or have been when you would have weighed more) an issue because often times sleep apnea is worsened by being significantly overweight.

                            I would get both of these checked out, but don't discount blood sugar problems as potentially being at least part of the issue. What you describe is exactly why uncontrolled or poorly controlled diabetics are not permitted to have Class "A" CDL's for driving large trucks. If blood sugar either gets high and stays high, or conversely gets very low, bad consequences ranging from poor reaction time and decision-making all the way to the "falling asleep" that you describe can occur, and that leads to a very dangerous situation for those who drive professionally as well as anyone else in their vicinity as they continue to drive.

                            I hope this has helped you more than it has scared you, and you may well already be familiar with most of it. Best of luck in getting things figured out!
                            Just wanted to say, very good post.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Anoyone have CPAP experience?

                              Thanks for the post Brad......I am an insulin taking diabetic. I've been on the needle for about three years. That is how I know what the Atkins does to my sugar I take my readings prolly 5 times a day.

                              The wife put me on the Flat Belly Diet *don't laugh, I didn;t name it* and my sugar has really gone down. I am taking less insulin than I used to and at times my numbers are too low to safely take my nighttime dose.

                              BTW.........sidenote: In watching my sugar readings I have noted that I get the same readings after drinking DIET Cola as I do if I drink a regular. THe artificial sweetner is recognized as real sweetner in some people's body, so bewary.
                              Ever notice how friendly folks are at a shootin' range??.

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