The SleepLab Hotel at The Everett Marina
![](http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_4mm9dP8C46o/ScZqK932owI/AAAAAAAAAPM/tr171fFInlE/s320/SleepCenter.jpg)
And that’s how I ended up there. Over the last couple of years, BowlingWidow has told me that at times I’ve stopped breathing for 15-30 second intervals during the night. I also snore but, hey, who doesn’t? The breathing thing became enough of a wakeup call though, even for someone like me who would rather bowl ten 140 games in a row than go visit a doctor.
Sleep apnea is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, high blood pressure, arrhythmias, and diabetes. It’s not gonna get you that one time but the cumulative effect can sneak up on you and make things miserable during those so called golden years (that seem to be approaching faster than I care to admit).
The bed: did I get the death penalty?
![](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_4mm9dP8C46o/ScZq1Leoa4I/AAAAAAAAAPU/7YpfYAT3ia0/s320/SleepBed.jpg)
The CPAP was for demonstration only and was not to be a part of the diagnostic study. At around eight, they began attaching wires to me. Not just a few. There were somewhere around 15 of them. Several were on my head in various locations. These were designed to track localized brain activity during the various stages of sleep up to and including REM sleep (which does not imply that I was dozing and listening to the music of Michael Stipe and Peter Buck).
BowlingJoe as Lab Rat: Doctor, please don't administer the shock
![](http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_4mm9dP8C46o/ScZrjJcR6II/AAAAAAAAAPc/hI4ynNma2wQ/s320/Wired1.jpg)
There were wires to track breathing and my heart activity. They even had them attached to my jaw and calves to measure teeth grinding and restless leg syndrome, respectively.
Fully wired up and with a plastic device in my nose to monitor air pressure in and out, I was targeting a “bedtime” of around 9:45. I started reading the book I brought with me hoping it would help facilitate the process. It helped a bit but not much.
Actually focusing on going to sleep when “I had to” was challenging, particularly when combined with dodging wire bundles and making sure the tape holds (in most instances they used a type of glue to bond, but on the face proper it was tape).
I think that it took me around an hour to sleep and I remember waking up several times, including once to get permission to go to the bathroom. Yes, the technician has to come in and disconnect the wire pack so you can go do your business. But getting that to happen is easy, as there is a live intercom system as well as a camera on the ceiling above the bed. They don’t miss much.
At 6:15am the next day, they came in and woke me up; telling me that the data collection they had planned for was a success. I have no idea how that happened because it felt like I got a less than optimal night of sleep. But I’ll trust them. The data has been sent to the sleep disorder specialist for interpretation and recommendation but I have yet to meet with him as I write this.
A typical CPAP mask
![](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_4mm9dP8C46o/ScZrxb4ihOI/AAAAAAAAAPs/8zPc2EwNHKs/s400/cpap.jpg)
My guess is that I’ll be invited for a return visit to The Hotel, find a CPAP mask that’s comfortable (inasmuch as those things are comfortable) and do the test over again only with the mask.
If you’re in a position to do so and have concerns about sleep apnea, I’d encourage you look into it. It doesn’t hurt and only costs you one, maybe two nights in terms of the time investment. Getting used to the mask, however, could be something else entirely.
May the force be with you.