Showing posts with label cpap machine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cpap machine. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

Difficulty breathing through your nose

Some people may complain about having a hard time breathing through their nose while on CPAP mask. This might be because of the following problems.



If you have allergies, chronic sinus problems or a deviated septum (your nose is crooked on the inside) you may have trouble using CPAP. CPAP is usually applied through the nose. If during the day you often find yourself breathing through your mouth, CPAP may be difficult to use. If the problem is allergies speak with your doctor about treatment. There are a number of good nasal steroid sprays and allergy medications that can treat your nasal congestion. Individuals with a deviated septum or other structural problems in their noses may benefit from seeing an Ear Nose and Throat specialist if CPAP cannot be tolerated.

Finally, there are CPAP masks that fit over both the mouth as well as the nose. People have used these with varying success but it may be worthwhile to try a "full face mask" before looking into more invasive or expensive alternatives.

For all who uses CPAP machines you might be experiencing some difficulties depending on your needs.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

S9 Autoset Algorhythm - ResMed S9 AutoSet

If you have an S9 Autoset CPAP Machines at home you may wonder how this machine works and what other features does it give you. If you are also looking for other machines then this might help to compare each products.

Watch The Video



The S9 AutoSet™ combines an intelligent algorithm with Easy-Breathe expiratory pressure relief (EPR™) to dynamically adjust pressure for maximum comfort.

Using ResMed's time-tested APAP technology, AutoSet™ continually monitors breathing, adapting breath-by-breath to always deliver the lowest therapeutic pressure, improving comfort and sleep.

Enhanced AutoSet is now able to differentiate between obstructive and central sleep apneas, so you can be confident that you are always receiving appropriate therapy and pressure.

Features
  • Choice of APAP or fixed CPAP, with or without EPR
  • AutoSet algorithm auto-adjusts to maintain optimal therapy pressure
  • Climate Control maintains ideal humidification according to real-time environment
  • Easy-Breathe motor offers the quietest therapy available
  • Easy-to-use controls and color LCD make menu navigation simple and intuitive
  • SlimLine™ and ClimateLine™ tubes are exceptionally slim and lightweight, virtually eliminating tube drag
  • Detailed data options
  • For complete list of features, see specifications
For orders of this CPAP machine you may call: 877-290-8636 or visit www.pulmonarysolutions.net


Wednesday, January 8, 2014

CPAP Machine Failure Saves Family From Fire

Snoring wakes family and saves their lives before home is overtaken by fire  


KLTV.com-Tyler, Longview, Jacksonville, Texas | ETX News


Fresh news about how snoring wakes the family because of a "CPAP Machine" failure and saves their live due to sudden fire burst in one section of their homes. According the Charlene Sakoda The Hester family from Chapel Hill, Texas is crediting their patriarch’s snoring for their fortunate escape from a house fire. The family was in bed for an hour that night when Dixie Hester awoke. Her husband, Bobby Hester told KLTV 7, "I use a CPAP machine because I have sleep apnea and I guess I started snoring, and I woke my wife up and she said 'turn on your machine.'" Bobby realized that his CPAP, or continuous positive airway pressure, machine shut off because the power was out in part of the house.

Bobby Hester (KLTV)
While her husband checked on the circuit breakers, Dixie noticed a light coming from their yard. "She opened the mini-blinds and it was very clear something wasn't right, so we both come out the front door and it was, the house was on fire at the top of the house." The couple escaped the home they built in 2002 with Hannah, their 14-year-old daughter, their pet dog and cat, and a few select family heirlooms.

Dixie Hester (KLTV)
With a look away from the camera, Bobby was bravely able to say, "It saddens my heart, but after, after a while you realize it's just stuff, and the most important thing is we're still intact." Many in the community have offered help and donations to the Hesters, and several funds have been set up to assist them. It’s generosity that the family especially appreciates in their time of need.


No conclusion as to the cause of the fire has yet been reached however, the family is certain they were saved by the CPAP machine failure. Bobby reflected, "If it hadn't been for that, I don't know what the outcome would have been because I'm a pretty sound sleeper and my wife is, too. But we all made it out safely and that, you know if that's the Lord's way of doing it, that's fine enough for me, you know."



For more news and video watch visit:


Monday, November 4, 2013

Does System One REMstar Pro CPAP with Heated Humidifier, 6 ft Heated Air Tubing from Philips Respironics Works?

You have been wondering why you have been sleeping with enemy. You may call it whatever you like but in my case I would like to call it enemy because it may turned into death if not treated. I have been diagnose with sleep apnea and required to use CPAP machine. I am curious about it at first and later on find it as my own way of helping others to counter sleep apnea and copd cases. 

Talking about CPAP machines I can give you my best choice. The System One REMstar Pro CPAP with Heated Humidifier from Philips Respironics. I have been using it for years and never it failed me. I am very much anxious about it at first but later on I became comfortable on it.

What is System One REMstar Pro CPAP with Heated Humidifier?

The Philips-Respironics "System One" REMstar Pro with AutoIQ has all of the features available with the original REMstar Pro but with added benefits to ensure the patient receives the proper care and compliance. The System One’s newest addition of sleep therapy has a system smart enough to track and deliver breath-by-breath therapy for up to 30 days while it learns the patient treatment needs. The two new features are Auto-Trial and Auto-Check. 

Auto-Trial and Auto-Check

The Auto-Trial phase gathers information and based on what it learns, it then sets a fixed pressure and converts to the Auto-Check phase. The Auto-Check then checks back every 30 hours just to see if the therapy pressure it established is still on track. If not, the device will automatically adjust to obtain an ideal pressure. All of this without the need to send someone from the care team to the patients homes. 

C-Flex+ is Respironics’ newest enhancement to comfort when in fixed CPAP mode. Like C-Flex, C-Flex+ provides flow-based pressure relief at the beginning of exhalation. Like A-Flex, C-Flex+ softens the pressure transition from inhalation to exhalation to provide additional comfort in fixed-CPAP mode. 

The System One resistance control allows the patient to tell the machine what type of mask you are using such as a nasal, full face, or nasal pillow. The machine then makes adjustments for optimal flow depending on your mask. Each Respironics mask will now come with a resistance control setting letting you know how to set your machine to match your mask. 

Philips-Respironics has upgraded their event detection algorithm to include data on Snoring, Periodic Breathing (PB), Respiratory Effort-Related Arousals (RERAs), Apnea Hyponea Index (AHI), leak, Clear Airway Apnea (CA), Obstructed Airway Apnea (OA), and Hyponea (HY). The REMstar Pro will also record Patterns of use and Flow waveform data. With this information, your physician will be able to better determine the best possible solutions for your sleep therapy. 

The PR System One uses a SD card for data collection. Prior to the System One, patients were required to use a specialized card reader when uploading sleep data to a computer. Philips-Respironics has made this process easier by using the standard SD card, giving the patient the ability to use any SD reader to upload sleep data. 

Philips-Respironics also listened to user feedback when designing the System One Heated Humidifier. A cleverly designed water chamber works with a built in Dry Box to virtually eliminate water getting into the machine during normal use. Even with a water chamber filled to the FULL line, the machine can be tilted and even turned upside down without leaking water back into the unit*. Furthermore, System One Humidity Control monitors room temperature, room humidity, and flow to determine what is required to maintain your selected humidity setting, even when environmental conditions change. Because of this, you can be assured that your therapy comfort will be maximized by virtually eliminating rain-out and condensation buildup in the tubing. 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

CPAP Testimonials: 3 Patients' Honest Opinions of Sleep Apnea Treatment


It may be hard to believe that something described as "a hurricane blowing up my nose" could also be considered a lifesaver. But that's exactly how Mike Miner, whose obstructive sleep apnea causes him to routinely stop breathing during the night, feels about his continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine.

For many patients, CPAP is a blessing
After being diagnosed with sleep apnea, Miner, 58, became one of the hundreds of thousands of Americans who regularly use air pressure machines to improve their oxygen levels while they sleep. Even napping without it would be pointless, says the golf course irrigation salesman in Jupiter, Fla., because he'd wake up every few minutes gasping for breath.

Miner admits that he was reluctant to try the clumsy-looking device, and that the blast of air up his nose felt awkward at first, but within the first week of using it, he was a convert. "Now if I don't wear it, I can feel what they were seeing in the sleep lab: I can feel that I wasn't breathing."

To others, it's a hassle
Virginia Arguello, 44, agrees that the benefits of CPAP are life-changing. When she spent her first night with a CPAP machine in 2000, she woke up feeling like a new person.

"It was the first time in years that I didn't have this recurring nightmare of being trapped underwater, never reaching the top," explains Arguello, a medical transcriptionist in Hayward, Calif. "I used to wake up gasping for air. The change was like night and day; I never realized how sleep deprived I'd been until I got the machine. It gave me back my sanity!"

Arguello used her CPAP machine religiously for more than seven years, but eventually started to feel burdened by the machine—wearing it every night, hauling it on vacation, and struggling to get by without it when she went camping with her family. So at 44, she underwent surgery to have her tonsils, uvula, and soft palate removed—a procedure that so far (six months after her operation) has allowed her to sleep without CPAP.

"That machine changed my life, but at my age, I just want to be free of it," she says. "My doctors told me that as my body changes I may need to go back to the machine, but I just need to know that I've tried everything."

And to some, an impossibility
Some people never get used to CPAP, no matter how many models they try. Matt Hanover, 44, was given a machine after his apnea diagnosis about four years ago. For more than nine months, he tried countless pressure levels, masks, and machines with sophisticated features like humidifiers and self-regulating airflow. But his narrow nasal passages and an oversize tongue, his doctors explained, caused a problem.

"I've been a mouth breather all my life," says Hanover, a digital media producer in Santa Monica, Calif. "Wearing the CPAP machine felt equivalent to sticking my head out of a car window going 30 miles an hour. And I just couldn't keep my mouth shut for more than an hour to breathe through my nose."

Hanover eventually found treatment with an oral breathing device that moved his jaw forward while allowing him to breathe through his mouth. He later cured his apnea completely, with surgery to repair a deviated septum.

Source: CPAP Testimonials: Health.Com

Thursday, June 20, 2013

5 Ways to Live With Your CPAP Machine

Adjusting to CPAP can help people with sleep apnea sleep better. Here's how to do it.

Your doctor has told you that you need to use a Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) machine while you’re sleeping to treat your obstructive sleep apnea. If you’re like most people who receive this news, you’ve got mixed feelings about it.
"Most people are not thrilled," says Meir Kryger, MD, director of sleep medicine research and education at Gaylord Hospital in Wallingford, Conn., and a researcher for Respironics and ResMed, which develop and manufacture sleep apnea devices. "Some are relieved there is a treatment for what they have."
Sleep apnea is marked by brief but repeated interruptions in breathing during sleep. The CPAP typically includes a face or nasal mask that pumps a flow of air into the nasal passages to keep the airway open. But some people abandon the machine before they can get used to it. In a study of 639 people published in 2010, 19% had stopped using the machine after four years and 30% had stopped within 10 years.
But adjusting to CPAP can make your sleep -- and life – better, especially if you have severe sleep apnea. Read on to get sleep specialists’ top five tips on how you can make peace with the device.

Focus on the Health Benefits of CPAP

To help people stay focused on the big picture, Nancy Collop, MD, president-elect of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and professor of medicine at Emory University School of Medicine, explains what is happening in your body.
"Your body is in this constant struggle at night between breathing and sleeping," says Collop, who also directs the university sleep center. "Fortunately, breathing wins, but it wins at the expense of your sleep."
Lack of sleep causes daytime sleepiness, which can make it difficult to function at work and elsewhere. But lost sleep can also have an adverse effect on aging, diabetes, and blood pressure.
The purpose of the CPAP is to take away the struggle between breathing and sleep. And the majority of CPAP users report immediate symptom relief, according to the National Sleep Foundation. They also report increased energy and better mental alertness during the day.
"Very few people like CPAP, but they love the outcome," Kryger tells WebMD. Kryger says that using CPAP improves heart rhythms in some people. (Abnormal heart rhythms can increase the risk of stroke.) CPAP use may also reduce high blood pressure, at least a little.
Many people also feel that using CPAP makes them less of a danger to themselves and others – when driving, for example, or operating machinery. "In terms of safety issues, they are not going to be a hazard due to daytime sleepiness," Kryger says.

Friday, May 24, 2013

A Review of Philips Respironics New PR System One Auto SV Advanced: Simplifying Sleep Apnea Treatment



Recently, Philips Respironics of Murrysville, PA has released their new BiPAP auto SV advanced CPAP machine, their "next generation" SV device designed to make patient management nearly automatic. This optimized CPAP machine therapy will improve treatment for patients with complicated sleep apnea conditions and manage airway and optimal ventilation by adjusting to patient's changing therapy requirements.

The Auto SV advanced System One BiPAP machine was specifically designed for patients with mixed, central, or complex sleep apnea the peace of mind and the ability to monitor their CPAP needs in an effective and cost-effective way.

As far as CPAP machines and BiPAP machines go, the Auto SV Advanced System One uses innovative and clinically proven algorithms to continually monitor and adjust to a patient's evolving therapy needs. The BiPAP machine therapy also enhances comfort for long-term use and efficiency.

If you're in the market for a new CPAP machine or BiPAP machine, the Auto SV Advanced System One offers more device intelligence so you the user can stay informed and make timely decisions effectively. With the power of the Auto SV Advanced algorithm and the System One platform, your BiPAP machine has the ability to monitor sleep assessment parameters for optimum feedback. This is ideal for more complicated CPAP machine patients. The Auto SV advanced BiPap machine also provides detailed patient-flow waveform data and can pinpoint other indicators and beyond normal Sleep Apnea symptoms. Your BiPAP machine also offers real time valuable information and patient management.

The reason to check out a new CPAP machine or BiPAP machine, particularly the BiPAP PR System One Auto SV Advanced is for the accuracy of patient information. When your BiPap or CPAP machine makes it easy to collect and share important data, you the patient are better able to communicate with your doctor or change prescriptions and treatment quickly. The intelligence of new CPAP machines like the PR System One Auto SV Advanced can be collected wirelessly for remote access, helping your clinicians improve your OSA treatment.

The PR System One Auto SV Advanced BiPAP machine is designed to simplify the management of complex sleep apnea. If you're interested in an intelligent machine like the PR System One or any other advanced CPAP machine, speak with your doctor or local CPAP machine professional to learn more about your options. Like the Philips Respironics PR System One Auto SV Advanced, future CPAP machines will continue to help OSA sufferers better monitor and adjust their treatment as therapy needs change.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/sleep-articles/a-review-of-philips-respironics-new-pr-system-one-auto-sv-advanced-simplifying-sleep-apnea-treatment-4758460.html

About the Author
Erica Ronchetti is a freelance writer working with The CPAP Shop to provide customers with new information on CPAP advancements. Learn more about CPAP Supplies by visiting our website!

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