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
I am glad it went well!
Moderator: bbsadmin
EHA wrote:This is very interesting. Thank you for sharing. I've wondered if peri-menopause/menopause worsens apnea for these very reasons. My current CPAP setting is at 7 and the sleep doctor just reviewed it again wants to keep it there. I've wondered if it should be adjusted a bit higher. Did you not have jaw surgery for sleep apnea?bbsadmin wrote:Thought I'd throw in a comment here. I have moderate sleep apnea (my husband has severe obstructive apnea). We both use CPAPs.
I went through menopause a few years ago, which resulted in a small weight gain, including some annoying fat in the neck area. I started to feel as if I wasn't sleeping well anymore. Went to my sleep doctor. She said that indeed, menopause can cause some visceral fat accumulation in the neck area for women that may make apnea worse. She changed my machine to an APAP and increased the pressure to a range of between 8 and 12 (my previous pressure setting was 7). I seem to have leveled off at a pressure of about 9. So yes, I needed more pressure -- and it was due to menopause.
So, ladies out there with sleep apnea, keep this in mind. As you get older, you may need to get your CPAP pressure re-evaluated.