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ResMed AirSense 10 AutoSet

See your full AirSense 10 therapy data

CPAP Clarity reads the EDF files from your AirSense 10 SD card and shows you everything myAir leaves out: per-event AHI breakdown, leak trends, pressure charts, flow limitation, respiratory volume, and your actual machine settings.

What CPAP Clarity shows you

AHI Breakdown
OA / CA / H / RERA

See exactly how many obstructive apneas, central apneas, hypopneas, and RERAs occurred each night, not just the combined AHI number myAir shows.

Leak Analysis
Median, P95, Max

Track your mask seal over time. Median leak shows typical performance; the 95th percentile catches the bursts that disrupt therapy.

Pressure Trends
Min / Median / P95

See how the AutoSet algorithm adjusts pressure through the night. The AirSense 10 AutoSet carries the same AutoSet therapy modes as the AirSense 11, so the pressure data is just as detailed.

Flow Limitation
Breath-by-breath

The AirSense 10 AutoSet records a flow limitation index alongside its high-resolution flow and pressure waveform. CPAP Clarity charts this so you can see partial obstructions that do not count as scored events.

Respiratory Rate & Volume
RR, TV, MV

Your breathing rate, tidal volume, and minute ventilation over the night. These metrics help you and your provider understand ventilation patterns.

Machine Settings
EPR, Mode, Mask

Your AirSense 10 records its therapy mode, EPR level, mask type, humidity, and tube settings. CPAP Clarity reads these directly from the SD card.

Cheyne-Stokes Detection
CSR Episodes

The AirSense 10 AutoSet, AutoSet For Her, and Elite log Cheyne-Stokes respiration episodes in a separate annotation file. CPAP Clarity parses these and shows them on your timeline.

Usage Tracking
Hours / Compliance

Nightly usage hours, 30-day compliance rate against the Medicare 70% threshold, consistency scoring, and weekend vs weekday patterns.

How to import your data

1

Remove the SD card

Power the machine off. The SD card sits behind a small cover on the left side of your AirSense 10, the end opposite the humidifier water tub, when you face the screen. Lift the cover and take the card out. Any standard full-size SD card reader works.

2

Insert into your computer

Plug the SD card into a USB card reader connected to your computer. You should see a drive named DATALOG or similar appear.

3

Drop the folder on CPAP Clarity

Open CPAP Clarity, go to the import page, and drag the entire SD card folder onto the drop zone. CPAP Clarity reads everything automatically.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does CPAP Clarity work with my AirSense 10?

Yes. CPAP Clarity fully supports the ResMed AirSense 10 AutoSet, AutoSet For Her, and Elite. It reads the EDF files from your SD card and parses every channel the machine records, including flow limitation and Cheyne-Stokes data that myAir does not surface.

How do I get my AirSense 10 to record detailed data?

It already does. Every AirSense 10 records detailed therapy data to its SD card automatically, every night, with no setting to switch on. You do not need to change anything in a clinical or hidden menu. The widely repeated claim that you must set the device to 'Essentials' to unlock detailed logging is not true: the Essentials setting only controls how much of the patient menu you can see, not what the machine writes to the card. To see the detail, you just read the SD card.

What does the AirSense 10 record on the SD card?

The AirSense 10 stores a high-resolution flow and pressure waveform (sampled at 25 Hz) on its SD card, plus lower-rate channels for leak, respiratory rate, tidal volume, minute ventilation, and flow limitation, and event annotations for apneas, hypopneas, and RERAs. It is recorded in EDF (European Data Format) files, the same data your sleep clinician sees in ResMed AirView.

What about the fixed-pressure AirSense 10 CPAP model?

The richest view, with central-apnea, Cheyne-Stokes, and flow-limitation detection, comes from the AutoSet, AutoSet For Her, and Elite. The basic fixed-pressure model labeled AirSense 10 CPAP runs at one set pressure and does not include that event-detection layer, so its card shows less. If CPAP Clarity sees a card that only carries summary data, it tells you clearly, so you are never left guessing why the detail is missing.

I have an AirSense 10 Card-to-Cloud. Where is my data?

On the SD card. The Card-to-Cloud version has no cellular connection and no myAir, so the SD card is the only way to see your therapy data on a computer. The good news: a Card-to-Cloud machine records exactly the same data as a regular AirSense 10 of the same model, so it reads in CPAP Clarity just like any other AirSense 10. Pop the card out and drop the folder in.

How is the AirSense 10 different from the AirSense 11?

The two machines carry the same AutoSet therapy modes and record the same detailed data to the SD card, so your dashboard looks the same on either one. The AirSense 11 adds a touchscreen and phone pairing; the AirSense 10 has an LCD screen, a control dial, and cellular myAir sync. For your data, the practical difference is minimal: both expose the full picture through the SD card.

Is my data safe?

All processing happens in your browser. Your CPAP data never leaves your computer and is never uploaded to any server. CPAP Clarity stores your data in your browser's local storage so you can return to it later without re-importing.

Do I need the SD card or can I import from the cloud?

You need the SD card from your AirSense 10. The myAir cloud only syncs a basic summary; it does not expose the detailed EDF files that contain your full therapy data. The card sits behind a small cover on the left side of the machine (the end opposite the humidifier water tub) when you face the screen. Lift the cover, take the card out, and drop the folder onto CPAP Clarity.

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