So my sleep doc, after I questioned him about the fact that I had zero AHI even at bipap pressure 8/4 during my last psg, said I could have a split night study in 3 months to see if I even still have sleep apnea. (I had a tonsilectomy 3 years ago and this was my first psg after the tonsilectomy.) He could not give me any answers about all these spontaneous arousals, which are currently my main concern, except to say that the bipap itself could be causing it (complex sleep apnea syndrome? after research I don't really think it applies to me as I only had 4 central apneas in 6+ hours of sleep).
I had already done tons of research into these arousals, which are not associated with any measurable respiratory events, and hadn't found much. After this visit with the sleep doc, I decided to try again. I hit upon a combination of search terms that finally yielded some results and I came up with information about UARS. Most sleep centers aren't doing very sensitive tests for this (belts on abdomen and chest aren't sensitive enough--they need to put probes in your nose and/or mouth--of course they do!?!).
I contacted the sleep doc's nurse and said I want to go to a sleep center that measures for UARS this time for this next psg. I want as much information as possible and not waste any valuable time/money. They have yet to get back to me, so I started looking for one on my own.
First hit says this on their home page:
We had a power outage a few weeks ago. I didn't snore. Slow even breathing, according to my husband who was listening because he was worried. Should I still stand firm and insist on this special test? I have never heard this before about UARS, but admittedly know very little about it.It is easiest to think of Upper Airway Resistance Syndrome (UARS) as severe snoring, although there are times when UARS can occur with little noise, particularly in children. UARS is a condition when the air passageway narrows so much that chest muscles and diaphragm have to work very hard to pull air into the lungs. UARS is at the midpoint of severity in breathing disorders between snoring and obstructive sleep apnea. As snoring gets worse, it becomes UARS. Untreated UARS can evolve into obstructive sleep apnea.
Any comments would be helpful. I need to find out why I have so many spontaeous arousals.