rested gal
Joined: 14 Jun 2005
Posts: 401
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What pressure were you prescribed S&S?
Most people who use a machine with C-Flex do like the ease of exhalation, but some don't. If you like it (I do), then you might want to ask for a trial of the Respironics REMstar Auto with C-Flex. C-flex was added to Respironics autopap last year so that people using that autopap can also enjoy some relief on exhalation too.
C-Flex does not give the exact setting relief for exhaling that one can get with bi-level machines, commonly called "bipaps". The slight "bump" as the pressure comes back in with C-Flex, before you're quite finished exhaling (as Vicki described) was disconcerting to me at first, too. Once I found out it was supposed to work that way I got used to it easily. Bi-levels, on the other hand can be smooth as silk if set up properly in sync with you. A bipap will wait until the cows come home at the end of every exhale -- waiting until you're start your inhalation.
The reason I'd try the Auto with C-Flex first is in case you are able to use a lower pressure than your titrated pressure for much of the night. Less pressure usually means fewer mask leaks. If annoying little leaks are bothering you while you sleep, without your even being aware of them, that could be a source of the urge to "get that thing off", waking you just enough to remove the mask but not remembering doing it.
It may not even have anything to do with the machine you already have, of course. Even if your mask is reasonably comfortable, having a mask on one's face is a strange new way of sleeping. It can take months and months for some people to get used to all the equipment issues and keep the mask on all night. It's a natural instinct to try to get the face uncovered or bat the thing away in your sleep, especially if it's a mask that's uncomfortable in the first place.
A lot of people find nasal pillows interfaces (e.g., Swift, Breeze, Aura) less obtrusive and more comfortable to sleep in.
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