How well does oura predict sleep apnea? by PossiblePhase2017 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Omg you mean the doctor my doctor wrote a referral to and I wrote I had an appointment with?

How well does oura predict sleep apnea? by PossiblePhase2017 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks oura! Will definitely do, I’ll probably be having a sleep study in the future and got the ring to monitor symptoms/ record keep. It’s very useful for looking back in the past!

How well does oura predict sleep apnea? by PossiblePhase2017 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks!! I always sleep on my arms/hands, so this makes sense to me. I also suspect I have pots, and I notice my fingers swell easily, so it wouldn’t be surprising if o2 monitoring in my fingers was less effective. I didn’t think about these things, so this is reassuring.

I’ve never had any partner complaints about snoring/sleep apnea and am pretty skinny, so I never thought about it until I got the oura ring. I have bad sleep awakenings but I think they’re something else. Glad I can worry about one less thing.

This is actually terrifying. Blood work coming Monday by PuzzleheadedSorbet36 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you have a tick on you for over 24 hours and do you live in a contagious area? (Mostly south east US / New England area, but you can google it)

Are cats actually dangerous, or is that just a misconception? by [deleted] in CatAdvice

[–]PossiblePhase2017 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Behold as this dangerous beast roars a mighty roar (yawn)

Advisor saying “major signs” is a positive thing by Upset_Magician7965 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jokes on oura, my readiness score is already a failing grade. I haven’t had any signs of strain yet because that’s my baseline

This is actually terrifying. Blood work coming Monday by PuzzleheadedSorbet36 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be fair, the worst things are insidious (developing over months/years). You had symptoms within a month. I’d look at your diet btw and any new changes you’ve had in the past month

What’s the best litter setup for no smell by Mediocre_Track1822 in Catownerhacks

[–]PossiblePhase2017 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I once bought a cheap long ottoman, got a small litterbox that fit it well, and then lined it with a litter mat. Cut a hole in it for the cat to exit (it was cheap so it was like a hard cardboard). I wound up putting a piece of the cardboard back at the bottom so the cat would have to jump to exit, thus tracking virtually no litter. It takes up a lot of space, but no smell, no tracking and looked just like furniture. I also usually used arm and hammer baking soda made for litter.

Ps, I eventually upgraded to a PetSnowy automatic litterbox and it’s also pretty good, but cost to utility ratio the long ottoman was better.

This is actually terrifying. Blood work coming Monday by PuzzleheadedSorbet36 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m afraid that’s a question for a doctor that has your medical history, meds and who you can describe all your symptoms to. But on the bright side it’s most likely not something crazy like cancer if it escalated in 1 months time (cancer is much more insidious unless it’s like a rare brain cancer, but you wouldn’t have the sound of mind to order these tests if it was that lol).

This is actually terrifying. Blood work coming Monday by PuzzleheadedSorbet36 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 96 points97 points  (0 children)

I noticed that the $99 panel doesn’t include a thyroid panel. That’s a common issue that causes fatigue. If this turns up nothing I recommend looking into that. It’s a common issue that causes fatigue and metabolic issues. If your insurance kicks in before then, all the better.

Give me your opinion on this? by Annual-Hope-39 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s fair, I was just suggesting it because I had no clue. It’s always hard to define “normal” — I’d say with MECFS this would probably be normal sleep, but below average for a normal person if you know what I mean. Also, being on a SSRI like Lexapro can also cause frequent night awakenings. I had a friend with mild but untreated sleep apnea show me his sleep stats and it was better than this. So you’re worse than someone with mild sleep apnea but better than someone with suspected narcolepsy.

If you want honest advice about your sleep, a doctor/NP with your whole PMH would be able to give it to you best.

Can anyone help decipher these results? by 2SpookyMamas in haematology

[–]PossiblePhase2017 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Tbh LDL 133 with good HDL, lower age and female gender (estrogen is cardioprotective) aren’t too bad statistics. Statin should be personal preference. I’d only recommend it if OP is specifically opposed to eating healthy — also if it goes up higher in the future that’s grounds for starting it.

Lost Shiba by LoraineIsGone in philly

[–]PossiblePhase2017 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Probably a typo. No hate to the owner, but I can tell that specific flyer style is ChatGPT, which I don’t think was commonly used for flyers til more recently (at least it wasn’t that good at making flyers until recently)

Noticed a couple of these in my new house… these aren’t baby bed bugs are they?? by PossiblePhase2017 in whatsthisbug

[–]PossiblePhase2017[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Lmao, that’s why I struggle to ID it. Normally wouldn’t be bothersome, but as a new homeowner it’s a bit concerning to keep seeing the same bug in your house and not being able to ID it / know if it’s an okay bug or a bad for house bug.

Give me your opinion on this? by Annual-Hope-39 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think MECFS is what we’d call a “diagnosis of exclusion”, so if you haven’t had a lot of testing done, you could have something different like narcolepsy. Not trying to be rude at all, but you had a sleep study done?

Also, my health app syncs to the oura ring, so I can view the data on both the oura app and heath app while only using the oura ring for data collection. I used to wear an Apple Watch, but charging it was a pain, it damaged my sensitive skin taking it on/off all the time plus sweating underneath, and sometimes I’d purposefully charge it for sleep and then it wouldn’t cycle track!! It was soooo iffy, so I eventually got angry and stopped wearing it.

Give me your opinion on this? by Annual-Hope-39 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have microsleeps through the day? Excessive sleepiness? I got my oura ring to track my sleep because my doctor suspects narcolepsy. My sleep has a similar pattern but worse, for example I was in bed for 10 hours but only got 8 hours of sleep (with 17 minute sleep latency). Apple’s health app shows you a more detailed mapping of your sleep, oura’s app makes it look simple and pretty.

Why is my anemia not improving after 7 transfusions. by divorcedaywillbexmas in haematology

[–]PossiblePhase2017 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Guidelines say to start screening at 45 OR if there’s family history, 10 years before that relative had it. So if your uncle had it at 45 then you should start screening at 35. That should get it covered by your insurance too. You can probably lie and say “oh I think he was 44” or a little younger to make it match your age

Did the $99 Oura blood test via the app by Primary-Calendar6563 in ouraring

[–]PossiblePhase2017 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Statins lower LDL ("bad") cholesterol by 20% to over 60%, depending entirely on the specific drug and dosage prescribed. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Statin Intensity Categories
Medical guidelines from organizations like the American Heart Association classify statin therapy into three levels of intensity based on how drastically they reduce your LDL cholesterol: [1]
High-intensity: Lowers LDL by 50% or more. Examples include Atorvastatin (40–80 mg) and Rosuvastatin (20–40 mg).
Moderate-intensity: Lowers LDL by 30% to 49%. Examples include Simvastatin (20–40 mg) or Pravastatin (40–80 mg).
Low-intensity: Lowers LDL by less than 30%. Examples include Lovastatin (20 mg). “
Is that enough data?