I posted before that I have sleep apnea. Since the diagnosis, I have learned a lot about the disorder – both from reading about it, and from living with it.

My wife tells me that my snoring scared her when we got married (nearly 16 years ago). At that time she knew nothing about sleep apnea, and there were probably not many doctors that knew much about it, either. So she put up with it. I didn’t know that I snored that much, but I did find that I was getting very tired during the day. I thought that was normal for the kind of work I was doing – sedentary, office-type work. I would try and do some exercise, but then I found I was getting even more tired. Weight was becoming a big problem.

There are many effects of sleep apnea – none of them nice. They include  high blood pressure; greater risk of heart attack and stroke; heart rhythm changes; waking up in the night to use the bathroom (I was lucky, only once a night); headaches (including migraine); daytime sleepiness, even after a ‘good’ night’s sleep; memory and concentration problems; weight gain;  possibly seizures; possibly diabetes; gastric reflux disease; sweating during the night; depression; anxiety; pain; impotence; relationship and job issues; and so on. Enough already? The real danger is that some people fall asleep during the day – the person not moving when the traffic signal has changed to green may have sleep apnea. They need sympathy and education, not an angry blast on the horn.

I have been using my CPAP machine for nearly a year now  and have seen a lot of improvement in my health. I don’t snore, and I am no longer needing to nap during the afternoon at work (a very good thing when the boss is around). I still get tired, but I don’t have the ‘brain fog’ that I used to have. I wake up before the alarm some mornings, and I no longer want to sleep late (after 7-8 AM) on a Sunday morning. I do find that I need to go to bed a little after 9:30 PM, but that is because I get up at 5:00 AM on days when I have to go to work.

The CPAP machine is amazing technology. It is just a little fan that blows air through a hose and into my nose through a mask. These masks are often called interfaces because they can cover the whole face (think Darth Vader), just the nose (a little bit like the masks that come down if there is a loss of cabin pressure in a plane), or just sit under the nose so that there is very little contact with your nose (called nasal pillows).

My personal favorite mask is the nasal pillows. They don’t make my nose sore, and are normally very quiet. They do get a bit noisy when they are not adjusted properly and air is leaking out of the sides.

The air pressure is something people get worried about. It is measured in centimeters of water. Why, I don’t know. If they talked about pounds per square inch (in the US, where I live), the numbers would be very small. Nothing that would blow up a balloon. I got used to the pressure I was prescribed very quickly – it was only 8, although I did have to have it increased to 10 after a couple of months because I was still snoring a bit.

So, sleep apnea is a scary thing – the treatment is not.

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