yea ive got it too, they put me on a cpap machine, i dont like it at all, hard for me to sleep with but i know plenty of guys who do it just fine.
personlly i find the whole thing dammed annoying, i hear the wind blowing from the damm thing all the time and it wakes me up, i also do not like the hose attached to me all night. sorry to be so negative about it all but its the way i feel. do i think i probably need help with this problem? prolly so but i wish there was another way. just my 2c |
Quote:
sec |
Quote:
Three months after he and his family moved from Los Angeles back to his home state of Texas, his wife heard a loud "CRASH!" in the basement. She ran downstairs, only to find her husband passed out on the floor. She called 911, and the medics arrived in less than 8 minutes. It was too late. He suffered from a massive heart attack and he hit the floor so hard that it caused brain damage. From the heart attack to the brain damage to the loss of oxygen to his brain, the plug was pulled 3 days later and he died. The cause? Sleep apnea. His heart was so weakened by the apnea that it killed him. It still gets to me even to this day... |
Quote:
Thank goodness, mine's silent. It's a Philips Respironics and with insurance and a doctor's note, cost me $250 dollars in 2015. Best money I've ever spent. |
Quote:
|
There is a device for implanting on the lung. It shocks the lungs to breathe when it stops for too long. Controlled my a remote or app.
Trying to find an ad for it. one possibility https://health.clevelandclinic.org/d...r-sleep-apnea/ |
Quote:
Doesn’t matter how much you work out or how great your cardiovascular shape is. Every time you stop breathing, you create pressure on the anterior walls of your arteries in your heart. Enough times, and everyone’s different on how long it will take, the walls of your arteries eventually fail. Maybe it’s only one artery but the right artery and there is no blood/oxygen getting pumped to a crucial heart muscle. Nothing can save you but an emergency by-pass operation where they put a new artery in to provide oxygen to your heart. |
Quote:
The issue is you. Everyone in here went through the same thing. We just decided that this thing on my face sucks but I want to feel better and more rested tomorrow. I want to consider my spouse and not keep her up with my snoring. Okay, I’ll take the damn medicine. |
I was dx with sleep apnea but i knew why. I was a bit heavy and drank a few too many beers each night. Tried a CPAP and neither myself nor my wife could sleep. **** that shit. Stopped drinking for 3 months and low and behold I stopped snoring....
The way I see it. If you are fat and a drinker, so is your tongue that blocks your airway at night. Either stop drinking or deal with a CPAP. |
I can just imagine how sexy your wives think you look in that cpap and huge jowels.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Sleep apnea is a lot more serious than many people think it is. Sleep apnea played a roll in the deaths of both Reggie White and Carrie Fisher.
As some have stated, REM sleep is extremely important to your overall health. Untreated sleep apnea contributes to sleep deprivation. The list of health issues caused by sleep deprivation is long, and too much to put into one post, but together sleep apnea and sleep deprivation can have a severe physical and emotional impact on your quality of life. I stopped breathing 44 times in a 6 hour period during my sleep study. At the time I was not in bad shape, and x-rays indicated that my jaw was set too far back, and made my airway extremely small when lying prone. So, while many associate the need for a CPAP machine with being overweight, that isn't always the case. I cannot recommend getting a CPAP machine enough. It may be difficult to find a mask that works for you, the benefits are well worth the trial and error. I currently use a Mirage FX nasal mask, which works for me because I naturally keep my mouth closed during sleep, and it's small in size. My actual machine learns my breathing pattern, and lessens the air pressure when I exhale, which makes it much easier to get used to. Respironics calls this feature C-flex, I think, but other manufacturers may call it something else. Sent from my GM1915 using Tapatalk |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I still get tired in the middle of the day sometimes, but that might just be the way it is. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:34 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.