Thursday, September 18, 2025

How To Fail A Sleep Test...

 




“Xi – Kah – Vah” 

“Xi – Kah – Vah” 

“Xi – Kah – Vah”  ….

I kept repeating this mentally hoping my old Transcendental Meditation mantra would send me off to sleep. That was after I had repeated the US Army relaxation technique that was guaranteed to bring on sleep.  It was 3AM and I was still wide awake.  Still worse – I was in a sleep lab trying to find out why my AHI has been pegged for the past 3 months.  AHI is the Apnea-Hypopnea Index and according to the manufacturer of my CPAP machine is measure the number of apneic episodes per hour that last longer than 10 seconds.  For the 20 years I have been on CPAP – the number has been 1-3, but 3 months ago it started going up to 10+ with no good explanation - other than possible central sleep apnea in addition to obstructive sleep apnea.  

My body weight and general life style has not changed at all.  I continue to get good overall scores on my CPAP machine despite the AHI.  I consulted my sleep medicine doc and he decided to increase the pressure and see if that worked.  It did not - so we decided to do another sleep lab test or polysomnography. It is a big deal since you are observed and filmed, connected to electrodes (EEG, ECG, OCG, laryngeal vibration, chest and abdominal respirations, legs (for RLS), and masseters for bruxism.

An unsettling factor in the mix is that according to polygenic risk analysis – I am loaded for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) genes.  And by loaded, I mean I am in the 100th percentile for risk.  I am not aware of central sleep apnea being the initial sign of ALS and neither was my sleep medicine doc – but I do not want to be the first case report.  So, I am hoping those genes remain quiescent and do not express themselves. 

I showed up at the lab at 8PM.  A technician explained their protocol and that after I was connected, I needed to contact her via the intercom if I needed to get up at night.  Under no circumstances was I supposed to get up by myself because it would endanger all the electrode connections.  I told her I was ready and she came back in and hooked me up over a period of about 20 minutes and then tested the connections. She also explained that I was not going to be started on CPAP - it would be added later in the night only if I needed it and then BiPAP would be added on top of that if I needed it.  Since I already had a diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) – that did not make a lot of sense to me.  But I was not upset and wanted to proceed with the ordered protocol.  I watched TV for about 20 minutes and it was lights out by 10PM.   

It did not take long to realize that I was just laying there thinking.  I recalled my first polysomnography in a sleep lab that was built in the Neurology Clinic of the hospital where I worked.  I had the feeling at that time that I did not sleep a wink but the tech said – “Oh no you slept all right and you have severe sleep apnea.” (AHI>50).  Since that time, I have been 100% compliant with CPAP.  I use it every night – no matter where I am. 

I checked my watch and it was 1AM.  Three hours of laying there thinking and no sleep in sight.  Time to try my sleep reverie trick.  Sleep reverie is a reliable sign of sleep onset being very close and, in my case, it takes the form of vivid and often nonsensical mental images.  For example – the image of a man walking down metal stairs from a loading dock.  A man working on an outboard motor.  A futuristic gray pickup truck driving down the road.  A 500 ml beaker in front of a small flat screen TV.  These images flash for a few seconds and I am asleep.  Some time ago, I thought I could speed sleep onset by recalling the early states of sleep reverie.  What did it feel like in the body and brain just before the images started?  I tried reproducing those sensations several times and almost had it.  I generated a brief flash of sleep reveries and it was gone – I was still wide awake.

I checked my watch and it was 3AM.  Still wide awake.  Flash on my mantra, muscle relaxation, breathing exercises, mindfulness exercises – all the tricks of the trade and I got nothing. My mind is wandering to far away places.  I am back in Africa in 1974 traveling up into the Aberdare Mountains to visit friends.  I am 25 years old and traveling with a young woman who is 23.  We are travelling in a high-speed taxi called a matatu.  They come in various forms but this one is a small Toyota pick up truck with a metal enclosure over the back.  My travelling companion and I are crammed into that enclosure with a dozen villagers trying to get up into the mountains.  Every time I get out of one of these things - I kiss the ground.  Many people were killed in matatus every year. I remember how cool that young woman was.  I flash ahead to hiking in the bamboo forest with her future husband and a mutual friend.  I flash ahead to getting overrun by soldier ants at his house up in the mountains and wondering if we were going to survive that night.  In the end we were saved by a paraffin refrigerator -  ants do not cross a line of kerosene. 

I checked my watch again and it was 5AM.  The technician’s voice came over the intercom: 

“You are not sleeping.”

“I know – I came close a few times – but never fell asleep.” (referring to the aborted sleep reveries).

“Do you want to just get up and leave?”

“I suppose”.

The technician came in and took about 10 minutes to disconnect all the electrodes.  I had 6 piles of salt and electrode paste on my scalp. 

“It should come off with just shampoo. Your doctor will look at the study.  He may decide to have you come back and give you a sleeping pill.”  

I thought about what happened on the way home calling on my years of studying sleep. I have had insomnia since I was a little kid with night terrors – but I only stayed awake all night long when it was necessary for my role as a physician. The first time was covering the coronary care unit as an intern and believing that another intern and I were responsible for a person on a balloon pump who was actively bleeding. Even as a psychiatrist there were the occasional all-nighters – typically catatonic patients who had questionable intake or agitation and aggression that did not respond to the usual measures.  And of course, complicated medical problems that always seemed to end up on my unit.  It got worse with the electronic health record because I could see almost everything from home.  But none of that is a problem in retirement.  My sleep is generally normal and I have no problem getting at least 6-7 hours per night.

The behavioral aspect of sleep provides some clues.  We all learn to fall asleep in a certain environment.  The environment I am used to is hooked up to a CPAP machine.  It has a certain sensation and noises.  The air splint from the pressure creates a certain internal sensation. Even though I was not bothered by trying to sleep without it – the lack of those sensations may have been the reason I could not sleep at all. 

A second issue was the bed.  I was handed a remote control and advised I could adjust the firmness of the mattress with the remote.  I did it at every time check dropping it by 30 percent each time.  By 5AM I was down to 30 (where 100 is the firmest).  I recently changed my home mattress and it required a trial before I could find an exact replacement.  There is a literature on mattress qualities and sleep that looks at firmness, temperature, and materials.  Most of the studies are interested in sleep but some look at spinal alignment and pain.  The results are generally mixed probably due to patient characteristics.  For example, although one review (1) finds that a medium firm mattress may work for most people – there are still are those at both ends of the spectrum that sleep better with very firm or soft mattresses.  I purchased my last mattress based on a study that I think was in the British Journal of Medicine (BMJ) suggesting that pillow top mattresses may work the best. With the replacement I tried a firm orthopedic mattress that resulted in back pain every day.  A new pillow top worked very well.  The sleep lab bed did not seem to change at all with the remote control and that may also have been a factor.  

So how do you fail a sleep study?  The short answer is by not sleeping but there are complicating factors.  I am waiting to find out if there will be a modified protocol and watching my AHI.

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

 

1:  Caggiari G, Talesa GR, Toro G, Jannelli E, Monteleone G, Puddu L. What type of mattress should be chosen to avoid back pain and improve sleep quality? Review of the literature. J Orthop Traumatol. 2021 Dec 8;22(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s10195-021-00616-5. PMID: 34878594; PMCID: PMC8655046.     

No comments:

Post a Comment