The body is on its own.
Most patients sleep without anyone watching their oxygen — even after a sleep study, even after a prescription. One night in a lab is a snapshot. The other 364 are unmonitored.
SpO₂ is falling.
A severe obstructive event lasts forty seconds. Saturation drops from 98 to 76. The patient stirs but doesn't wake. By morning, no one will know it happened. It will happen again tomorrow night, and the night after that.
The kidneys notice.
Hypoxic injury accumulates in the organs least able to advocate for themselves. Repeated nocturnal desaturation has been associated with progression in chronic kidney disease — a quiet contributor to a loud diagnosis.
The destination most cascades arrive at.
Four hours, three times a week. Whatever happened at four in the morning, night after night for years, is part of the reason this chair is occupied. Nobody connected the night to the chair — because nobody was watching.
What if someone had been watching?
Same patient. Same bed. But this time, a sensor on the finger and a dashboard in the cloud. SleepVigil verifies — every night, through whichever treatment was chosen — that the SpO₂ floor is actually rising. The cascade doesn't start if you catch it in the first chapter.
Bring intelligence to treatment.
Every patient responds differently. SleepVigil measures whether this patient's SpO₂ floor rises on this therapy — every night. Oral appliance, CPAP, positional, supplemental oxygen. We don't pick the treatment. We tell you if the one you picked is working.
When the apnea is severe, climb.
Moderate-to-severe disease usually warrants CPAP from the start — continuous pressure splints the airway open all night. When appliance therapy isn't enough, the data tells us. SleepVigil makes the choice empirical, not assumed.
Too much therapy backfires.
Pressure set too high triggers treatment-emergent central apneas, aerophagia, mask leak, and the kind of intolerance that ends in a CPAP machine in a closet. Mandibles advanced too aggressively cause TMJ pain and tooth movement. The patients who quit didn't disappear — they returned to untreated apnea.
Just enough therapy. No more, no less.
SleepVigil is the instrument that helps the clinician and the patient find the dose that keeps oxygen reaching the kidneys, the heart, the brain — without overshooting. The lowest pressure that works. The smallest advancement that works. The therapy the patient actually keeps using. That is the difference between a prescription and a result.