babyblueeyes wrote:
My breathing slows and then I have to fight for my breath and my oxygen drops below normal (hypoxemia). Not exactly sure what SAHS is but it was diagnosed as UARS (RDI averaged 130 total). When your airways narrow with apnea, what part of the airway actually narrows? I am aware that your throat collapses, but not aware of your airways narrowing. I have a problem causing this in my turbinate on one side of my nose. So kind of curious about it. My CPAP makes the pain/congestion worse from this condition so I can't even manage to use it much. Thanks...
SAHS: Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome. It's preferred by some because hypopneas are considered to count as part of apnea.
And your throat is part of your airway. "Your throat collapses" is the same as "your airways narrow." In my case, it is my throat that collapses, but it doesn't have to be (for either SAHS or UARS, as far as I know)—it can be anything between your nose and your throat.
I'm still waiting on my final numbers because my sleep doctor wanted to re-score the data before he gave the report to me.
There is an article posted somewhere around here (on the news forum maybe) about the a new hypothesis that UARS may not actually exist, that the instruments used in the sleep study don't accurately measure hypopneas so people who have SAHS (OSA) but with more hypopneas than apneas are being mis-diagnosed as UARS instead (because the hypopneas aren't being recorded right). It's an interesting idea, because the one thing I haven't been able to figure out is the difference between a UARS arousal and a hypopnea except that hypopneas are more severe, but I don't see why that matters (I mean, an apnea is an apnea whether it lasts for 10 seconds or 60, so why is a hypopnea sometimes a hypopnea and sometimes a UARS arousal?).


