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I had a sleep test in 2009, but they just sent me home with a glove-like device that somehow contains sensors for heart rate, oxygen flow and breathing rate, which I had to wear one night while I slept.
After I returned it, I had to go in again to learn the results.
Â
The in-lab sleep study tests for a lot of different problems⌠all those attachments can track air flow, snoring, eye movements, chest expansion, etcâŚ
The home âgloveâ test is just for apnea, but thatâs the problem in at least 75% of cases, so nowadays they usually do that first, and only do the other one if they need to.
Â
In my case, I had severe apnea, and was put on CPAPâŚ. itâll be 10 years in AprilâŚ
and I gotta tell you⌠it changed my life.
Yeah, it takes some getting used to, but you doâŚ
IF you quit focusing on the negative aspects, ie telling yourself how hard it is, or how you just canâtâŚ.
Stopping for two days out of five⌠things like that just set you back.
Â
If you just DO it, it gets easier, and once you start getting better sleep, and waking up feeling happier, and more alive, youâre more motivatedâŚ.
I had to go back a couple of times, try three different masks before I found the right one⌠but within a month it just felt normal.
Â
Yeah, I hated it at firstâŚ. but six months later I had to sleep without it for a couple of days, and it was torture.
It made me realise how many years I woke up exhausted, and feeling beat up, before I knew.
Â
If youâre told you snore; or you canât breathe through your nose at nightâŚ.
if you have a hard time sleeping⌠honestlyâŚ. try to get tested.
It might disturb one night but make all the rest so much better.
My husband (like most of his family) snores and I talked him into taking the apnea test and they determined that he did have sleep apnea but he refused to use the machine. My doctor thought I had it as well but turns out my sleep problem was that my husbandâs snoring pattern (not the decibels) was interfering with my breathing pattern - sort of like trying to keep pace with someone with longer legs â my breathing was trying to keep pace with his and I wasnât able to breathe deeply. The solution was separate bedrooms. He still snores (very loudly) but I sleep like a baby.
I have friends who swear by their CPAP/BiPAP machines. One had a next-door neighbor with sleep apnea who snored like a steam locomotive & kept her awake all night (she measured him at 120db through the wall). Everyone tried to talk him into getting a sleep study & a CPAP but he refused. One night he stopped breathing in his sleep & never started up again. Not the happiest way to solve the problem.
Too anyone who thinks the comments about decibels is exaggerating. They are not. Before I had my surgeryI lived in an apartment complex. I was the center unit with people above and beside me. When I snored someone always woke me beating on my door. I would take my sleeping bag and retire to my truck. It worked. Kept peace in the neighborhood, and fortunately they also understood it was a medical issue. The CPAP does take getting used to but it does work. After a year wearing it I felt I could try a night without it. Been a few times I needed to wear it a night or two, but never long term.
Fact of the matter is that not all are diagnosed with sleep disorders -which always made me wonder HOW that could be the case when they test with all the wires, hoses, etc. and tell you to âsleep like you normally wouldâ. And I was always amazed when they would tell me how âwellâ I âsleptâ when it felt like I didnât sleep a wink. I hate having to undergo sleep studies (Iâve been overdue for more than a year, and keep putting it off).
kevin about 6 years ago
He forgot the hospital elevator constantly running up and down next door all night.
wldhrsy2luv about 6 years ago
I have often wondered how they got to sleep with all those wires attached to them.
Lucy Rudy about 6 years ago
I refused to do it because I knew I couldnât! I had sinus surgery instead. How does anyone sleep with a C-Pap machine?
Walrus Gumbo Premium Member about 6 years ago
I have gone through a sleep study and this is exactly how they test you! Itâs insane! I hardly slept at all. It was a miserable experience!
Stevefk about 6 years ago
Wait, I got to go to the bathroom!
Say What Nowâ˝ Premium Member about 6 years ago
I have a hard enough time getting a good nightâs sleep at home and in my own bed.
SusanSunshine Premium Member about 6 years ago
I had a sleep test in 2009, but they just sent me home with a glove-like device that somehow contains sensors for heart rate, oxygen flow and breathing rate, which I had to wear one night while I slept.
After I returned it, I had to go in again to learn the results.
Â
The in-lab sleep study tests for a lot of different problems⌠all those attachments can track air flow, snoring, eye movements, chest expansion, etcâŚ
The home âgloveâ test is just for apnea, but thatâs the problem in at least 75% of cases, so nowadays they usually do that first, and only do the other one if they need to.
Â
In my case, I had severe apnea, and was put on CPAPâŚ. itâll be 10 years in AprilâŚ
and I gotta tell you⌠it changed my life.
Yeah, it takes some getting used to, but you doâŚ
IF you quit focusing on the negative aspects, ie telling yourself how hard it is, or how you just canâtâŚ.
Stopping for two days out of five⌠things like that just set you back.
Â
If you just DO it, it gets easier, and once you start getting better sleep, and waking up feeling happier, and more alive, youâre more motivatedâŚ.
I had to go back a couple of times, try three different masks before I found the right one⌠but within a month it just felt normal.
Â
Yeah, I hated it at firstâŚ. but six months later I had to sleep without it for a couple of days, and it was torture.
It made me realise how many years I woke up exhausted, and feeling beat up, before I knew.
Â
If youâre told you snore; or you canât breathe through your nose at nightâŚ.
if you have a hard time sleeping⌠honestlyâŚ. try to get tested.
It might disturb one night but make all the rest so much better.
Â
And no⌠I donât work for a CPAP company!
SkyFisher about 6 years ago
I roll over in my sleep way too often for this to work on me.
donwalter about 6 years ago
Iâve been there. Worst nightâs sleep of my life.
GreenT267 about 6 years ago
My husband (like most of his family) snores and I talked him into taking the apnea test and they determined that he did have sleep apnea but he refused to use the machine. My doctor thought I had it as well but turns out my sleep problem was that my husbandâs snoring pattern (not the decibels) was interfering with my breathing pattern - sort of like trying to keep pace with someone with longer legs â my breathing was trying to keep pace with his and I wasnât able to breathe deeply. The solution was separate bedrooms. He still snores (very loudly) but I sleep like a baby.
tbubble about 6 years ago
These comments arenât funny at all.
Indianapolis Smith about 6 years ago
And when they leave the room they tell you: âIâll be backâ
Indianapolis Smith about 6 years ago
OK. What happens now that heâs been assimilated?
swanridge about 6 years ago
âThatâs the problem Doc, I canât ever sleep because it feels like someone is watching me.â
anomalous4 about 6 years ago
I have friends who swear by their CPAP/BiPAP machines. One had a next-door neighbor with sleep apnea who snored like a steam locomotive & kept her awake all night (she measured him at 120db through the wall). Everyone tried to talk him into getting a sleep study & a CPAP but he refused. One night he stopped breathing in his sleep & never started up again. Not the happiest way to solve the problem.
scaeva Premium Member about 6 years ago
This is so true!
MadMonk about 6 years ago
Oh man, thereâs so much truth in that.
Dr_Fogg about 6 years ago
My wife can.
Jutta Tolbert Premium Member about 6 years ago
OMG, this is too accurate! Iâve had 3 sleep studies & this couldnât be more ON the Mark! Thanks for the laugh. Did you have a sleep study too?
noktar Premium Member about 6 years ago
This is a test for sleepless night
geoe1 about 6 years ago
Been there, done that. No sleep for me.
TMMILLER Premium Member about 6 years ago
Too anyone who thinks the comments about decibels is exaggerating. They are not. Before I had my surgeryI lived in an apartment complex. I was the center unit with people above and beside me. When I snored someone always woke me beating on my door. I would take my sleeping bag and retire to my truck. It worked. Kept peace in the neighborhood, and fortunately they also understood it was a medical issue. The CPAP does take getting used to but it does work. After a year wearing it I felt I could try a night without it. Been a few times I needed to wear it a night or two, but never long term.
I was FRAMED!!!!!! about 6 years ago
She forgot to mention that they will be coming in once an hour to take readings.
pcmcdonald about 6 years ago
Just pretend youâre a meatball on a plate of spaghetti.
M2MM about 6 years ago
I went through one of those tests many moons ago, I never slept a wink. :P
squiggle9 about 6 years ago
I was surprised I could sleep eventually â with hoses and wires attached
brewingbiker about 6 years ago
Fact of the matter is that not all are diagnosed with sleep disorders -which always made me wonder HOW that could be the case when they test with all the wires, hoses, etc. and tell you to âsleep like you normally wouldâ. And I was always amazed when they would tell me how âwellâ I âsleptâ when it felt like I didnât sleep a wink. I hate having to undergo sleep studies (Iâve been overdue for more than a year, and keep putting it off).
coffeeturtle about 6 years ago
Sleep is for the weak.
EmeryVerbeek about 6 years ago
What is going on?
captainkodak1 about 6 years ago
It tainât easy.