Hi there.
I'm new to the board, but have been reading for the past couple of days. I had a sleep study done at the hospital, and just found out I have apnea. I was talking to a nurse about my results, but then of course my cell phone found itself ina bad area, and the call was lost. What I found out is that I stop breathing 50 times per hour. Sounds severe to me! No wonder I've driven off the road 3 times in the past year and can't concentrate at work. Just how severe is my apnea compare to the "average"?
Then there was something she said about 80% of oxygen (cell phone then garbled). Then I just heard her say "...and that's not good at all." So does that mean that 80% of the oxygen I need for a restful nighht's sleep is not getting to me?
I guess I'll find out what all this means when I get my CPAP from them on Wednesday.
I'm actually very frightened to go to sleep now...Imean if I stop breathing every 1.5 minutes or so, I'm afraid.
I just need to hear from someone who is sharing this problem.
It started for me in November when I caught a terrible case of pneumonia. That lead to severe bronchitis, asthma, allergic reactions to EVERYTHING, sinusitis....it makes me sad just typing it.
Being a teacher in Illinois, they don't provide air conditioning. So, I've been teaching in a room that averages about 85 degrees daily. After a bad night's sleep, 8 hours of that is excruciating...add the students (ugghh) on top of that! The open windows trigger my allergies, which triggers my asthma, and has caused severe sinus infections. This of course doesn't help my sleep,and on and on the circle goes.
None of this horrible stuff has ever happened to me before, but it seems as though as soon as I hit 40..BOOM, it all hit!
I'm very sensitive to evrything, so I'm afraid of "the dreaded mask". Which is most comfortable? Will the CPAP help with my asthma and allergies?
What kind of numbers should I be looking for when I'm formally presented my sleep study?
Thanks for reading...if you got this far!
---Rich

