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Thread: Sleep Apnoea
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18th August 2005, 11:34 PM #1
Sleep Apnoea
Anyone else suffer from this?
I do. Was diagnosed as mild about ten years ago. Now it's 'moderate to severe'.
For those of you who don't know, it's associated with snoring - your windpipe gets blocked while you're asleep and your oxygen level drops. When that happens, you wake enough to restore the airflow but you don't fully wake. The result is, you spend the night with what feels like deep sleep but it's actually very broken sleep and you wake up feeling as though you haven't been to sleep at all.
Well, that's me. I wake up every day shagged out, regardless of how many hours I spend in the sack. It appears I wake about 50 times every hour :eek: It's no flamin' wonder I'm shagged and fall asleep at traffic lights, in waiting rooms, in front of TV, etc.
Well, they've put me on this ruddy air compressor. I get to wear a face mask with straps and stuff around me scone while it pumps air into me throat. The idea is that it acts as an air splint, keeps me airways open, and should give me a good night's sleep.
Well, tonight's me first night. The rotten thing feels like wearing a WW2 gas mask. The compressor sounds like it'd kick start a jumbo jet. I'm really looking forward to it Arrr, I know it'll be right (I flamin' hope). Be nice to wake up in the morning refreshed for a change.
Anyone else going through this sort of nonsense?
Richard
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18th August 2005, 11:41 PM #2
"Laugh and the world laughs with you, snore and you sleep alone "
Let's just say that I can relate to that sentence.
I don't think I have apneoa (or however you bloodywell spell it) though.
That is, I don't wake up tired out.
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18th August 2005, 11:47 PM #3
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
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18th August 2005, 11:53 PM #4Originally Posted by Daddles
robert34
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18th August 2005, 11:55 PM #5
Daddles[/SIZE], Daddles, Daddles
Wake up! You're snoring!
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19th August 2005, 01:36 AM #6
Sleep deprivation no good Richard...can make life really miserable. Are there other options open to you apart from the mask?
SWMBO is in the healthcare business and has a few friends involved with sleep disorder studies and treatment....will get her to throw together some contacts. Will be Adelaide contacts so might be of use to you.
Cheers MartinWhatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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19th August 2005, 02:13 AM #7Originally Posted by kiwigeo
Just pm me, or send us an email.
Mnay thanks.Last edited by RETIRED; 21st August 2005 at 12:38 AM. Reason: Removing email address.
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19th August 2005, 03:05 AM #8
Daddles,
Everytime you complain about the WW2 gas mask......take 5 and think of the alternative.
A very good friend of mine didnt even know that he had it........sadly he died because of it.
Food for thought!
Cheers
Steveif you always do as you have always done, you will always get what you have always got
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19th August 2005, 09:21 AM #9
Richard,
instead of complaining about the WWII gas mask, take it down to the shed and use it as a respirator! That way it will have a positive connotation for you when you wear it at night.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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19th August 2005, 10:16 AM #10
Richard
There are sleep apnoea machines and sleep apnoea machines. I just spent some time in hospital with three other patients who had sleep apnoea machines and I couldn't hear one of them running and they reckoned they couldn't hear them either although a couple of them reckoned they had to get their machines changed because of noise.
So there is hope for you yet as these guys say they have fantastic nights sleep.
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19th August 2005, 11:00 AM #11
Well, the first night passed. I managed to sleep with the mask - just a matter of getting used to it methinks. The machine itself wasn't noisy, but this is a loan machine - I get my own next week and it's a different model. I still woke up tired, very tired, but not the usual, death like exhaustion, so perhaps it's just a case of catching up on lost sleep now. My son was amazed because I didn't snore at all (I am well past 'impressive' usually). He said he got up this morning and stood at my door just watching me .
As for this machine and alternatives. I'm taking part in a study to examine different ways of treating it. Instead of finding a trillion dollars to go to a private sleep lab, instead of waiting for two or three years (no exageration that one) for a spot to become available at the public sleep lab, I was accepted for this study two weeks after posting them my doctor's referral - a case of being in the right place at the right time. Not only was I fast tracked, but it isn't costing me a cent (apart from the machine).
Part of the testing I did yesterday was a really vicious test designed to see what effects the sleep apnoea is having on my mental abilities (memory, etc). I was shocked to see how badly I went at some of the memory tests. It'll be interesting to watch those tests get easier as I pull out of the pit I'm in now - yes, I get to do them again, and again. It's all part of the study.
And yeah, I'm aware of the heart stresses, etc that OSA (obstructive sleep apnoea) can cause. I'm at the 'falling asleep at the wheel' stage. Seriously. I start to drift off at traffic lights and sometimes have to fight it when moving. Not good at all, particularly when you consider the amount of driving I do for the kids. It's a killer, and most people never think about it because the outward sign is snoring - admit you're a snorer and you get ridiculed
Ah well, being tired beats being nuts
Richard
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19th August 2005, 09:19 PM #12SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2004
- Location
- Kyabram. Vic
- Posts
- 55
Yup; chronic. One night I was tested I stopped breathing 477 times. The longest time in excess of 1 1/2 minutes. Has a slight stroke and the apnea was the likely culprit. $2000 for the machine was money well spent.
You will get used to the machine and eventually wont be able to sleep without it. Mine is one of the computerised ResMed versions. Good luck with it. Don't fight the machine and try an relax. It certainly makes the learning process easier.
For those who haven't seen or used one; think of sleeping with a gas mask on and the exhaust pipe of an old type vacuum cleaner blowing into it.
A real treat is when some d**khead hits an SEC pole and puts the power out. Now that is a RUDE awakening with no air.:eek:
Ken
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19th August 2005, 09:42 PM #13GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Oct 2002
- Location
- NSW
- Posts
- 0
My dad's in the same boat.
Daddles,
my dad is going through the same.
He's just been diagnosed (at age 75), and it explains why he's spent his life snoozing at every opportunity. (Probably also why he took the lid off one car by driving it under a truck after he fell asleep!)
When he had his night in hospital, they mentioned that anything over 10 "wakings" per night was serious, and he clocked in at 74!!
He's got his CPAP machine, and I had to buy Mum some earplugs, but now they're both happy with it. He's noticeably much more alert, and that's been less than a month with the machine.
Hope it works well for you too!
Cheers,
Andrew
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20th August 2005, 08:40 PM #14
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20th August 2005, 08:44 PM #15Retired
- Join Date
- May 1999
- Location
- Tooradin,Victoria,Australia
- Age
- 74
- Posts
- 2,515
My wife will tell you that women don't snore. They breathe heavy.
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