Preparing yourself for sleep – some quick reminders
I thought it would be useful to remind you of a few simple things that it might be worth trying to hopefully give yourself some releief from insomnia. A number of the things have been discussed in previous blogs in more detail, but sometimes it’s useful to look back and review some of the information.
There are a few different techniques here or things that you can alter which you never know might just provide that elusive cure for insomnia or help some relief for your sleep depravation.
Clear your mind. Do not watch TV, or read a book or go on the internet right before sleeping. Your brain can feel overwhelmed with all the information it has just heard that it will all linger on for a few more hrs and thus deprive you of sleeping right away. A clear mind can fall asleep quite easier.
Breathing technique. Lay down on your back, comfortably, and breathe in and out, slowly, but deeply. Do this over and over again. This breathing ritual will help relax you and cleanse your being, thus making it ripe for a good night of sleep.
Visualization. Close your eyes, and imagine the most beautiful, and peaceful place you know. Picture yourself there, and submerge yourself into the amazing feeling it's giving you. This will give you something relaxing and soothing to focus on, which will help calm you down and make you ready to fall asleep.
Sleep at regular hours. If you're awake until 3am and wake up in the afternoon, then you'll never overcome this problem. You need a normal sleeping schedule, which is waking up early in the morning, and going to bed not too late into the evening. Try it, and you'll notice immediate improvement.
Get rid of any addictions. The thing with addictions, is that they are constantly bugging you, and this even translates to the time when you're supposed to sleep. Therefore, if you have a caffeine, smoking, alcohol, or drug addiction, your best bet is to overcome the addiction first (which will help you not only for insomnia but for a lot more reasons) and then tackle your insomnia problem, which should already be much better with the loss of the addiction problem.
Listen to relaxing music. Music can guide our entire being into its tempo and mood. Same with relaxation music, and it can greatly help you feel at ease and stress free, which will help you fall asleep. You can also take it a step further and use self hypnosis or subliminal courses, which will help guide you mentally to overcome your insomnia, while also providing a relaxing music.
I particularly found that the listening to chilled out music helped me as one of the things that helped me gains some insomnia relief. I can particularly recommend a band called Lemon Jelly who are particularly chilled our even some of the Ibiza Chill out stuff - you can find from café del Mar on Amazon.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Welcome to Cure Your Insomnia. If you're looking for free tips on how to cure your insomnia and have a great night's sleep then you've come to the right place!
Showing posts with label Insomnia terms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insomnia terms. Show all posts
Monday, 15 November 2010
Busting the insomnia myths
Busting the myths.
This week I thought I’d share with you some information I’ve taken from The National Institute of Health’s Guide to Healthy Sleep.
It takes 4 key myths about Sleep and tells you the truth about them. Here goes…
Myths and Facts about Sleep
Myth 1: Getting just 1 hour less sleep per night won’t effect your daytime functioning. You may not be noticeably sleepy during the day. But even slightly less sleep can affect your ability to think properly and respond quickly, and compromise your cardiovascular health, energy balance, and ability to fight infections.
Myth 2: Your body adjusts quickly to different sleep schedules. Most people can reset their biological clock, but only by appropriately timed cues—and even then, by 1–2 hours per day at best. Consequently, it can take more than a week to adjust after traveling across several time zones or switching to the night shift.
Myth 3: Extra sleep at night can cure you of problems with excessive daytime fatigue. Not only is the quantity of sleep important but also the quality of sleep. Some people sleep 8 or 9 hours a night but don’t feel well rested when they wake up because the quality of their sleep is poor.
Myth 4: You can make up for lost sleep during the week by sleeping more on the weekends. Although this sleeping pattern will help relieve part of a sleep debt, it will not completely make up for the lack of sleep. Furthermore, sleeping later on the weekends can affect your biological clock so that it is much harder to go to sleep at the right time on Sunday nights and get up early on Monday mornings.
Makes you think doesn’t it.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
This week I thought I’d share with you some information I’ve taken from The National Institute of Health’s Guide to Healthy Sleep.
It takes 4 key myths about Sleep and tells you the truth about them. Here goes…
Myths and Facts about Sleep
Myth 1: Getting just 1 hour less sleep per night won’t effect your daytime functioning. You may not be noticeably sleepy during the day. But even slightly less sleep can affect your ability to think properly and respond quickly, and compromise your cardiovascular health, energy balance, and ability to fight infections.
Myth 2: Your body adjusts quickly to different sleep schedules. Most people can reset their biological clock, but only by appropriately timed cues—and even then, by 1–2 hours per day at best. Consequently, it can take more than a week to adjust after traveling across several time zones or switching to the night shift.
Myth 3: Extra sleep at night can cure you of problems with excessive daytime fatigue. Not only is the quantity of sleep important but also the quality of sleep. Some people sleep 8 or 9 hours a night but don’t feel well rested when they wake up because the quality of their sleep is poor.
Myth 4: You can make up for lost sleep during the week by sleeping more on the weekends. Although this sleeping pattern will help relieve part of a sleep debt, it will not completely make up for the lack of sleep. Furthermore, sleeping later on the weekends can affect your biological clock so that it is much harder to go to sleep at the right time on Sunday nights and get up early on Monday mornings.
Makes you think doesn’t it.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Insomnia in older people
Insomnia in older people
The article below is from Sleepdex an online resource which has lots of information about sleep, but as insomnia appears to get worse with age – there is some quite interesting stuff as to possible causes. If you are over 60 and suffering from insomnia, then I’m sure you will find it an interesting read.
Insomnia is a common complaint in older adults. Chronic sleep difficulties affect older people more often than younger adults. The homoeostatic regulation of sleep changes as we age. Older adults typically have shallower sleep, and fragmentation is more common. Doctors prescribe sleeping aids to the elderly much more often than for young adults or kids.
Factors that contribute to insomnia in seniors may include medical illnesses and medication use, both of which are more common in older adults. Older people also have too little physical activity and reduced exposure to bright light.
There is also a fundamental age-related alteration in the neurobiology of circadian
rhythms, although scientists haven’t figured it all out.
Older people, even healthy ones, often complain about decreased sleep quality, and polysomnographic measurements of physiological indicators have confirmed the reality of these claims. Deep sleep, as a percentage of total sleep, decreases as people age, along with a decrease in growth hormone levels. During late life, REM sleep in a typical night declines about 10 minutes per decade. Wake time during the nocturnal period, a measure of sleep fragmentation, increases about 30 minutes per decade.
There’s also a chicken-and-egg question of the relationship between declining sleep quality and development of chronic illness in older adults. Does low quality sleep contribute to other physical problems or do illnesses cause the low quality sleep?
It can be unclear for any individual, and the two factors are intertwined in most people.
It is worth pointing out the distinction between insomnia and disturbed sleep. Insomnia refers to a subjective inability to fall or stay asleep, and chronic insomnia is due to circadian dysrhythmia, homeostatic dysregulation and hyperarousal.
A person can have insomnia but not disturbed sleep. When the person finally gets to sleep, he or she can sleep soundly. Young adults more typically have trouble falling asleep while old people have trouble staying asleep.
Insomnia, by this classification, often results in increased risk of depression, overall decreased productivity at work and in daytimes activities. Disturbed sleep results in symptoms like those of sleep deprivation.
As people get older, they are more apt to experience secondary insomnia due to medical conditions, and to experience sleep disorders such as apnea, restless leg syndrome, and circadian rhythm disorder. Primary insomnia and insomnia due to psychiatric problems do not increase with age.
Some common poor sleep habits are more prevalent in elderly populations – staying in bed all night even when not sleeping (leading to poor sleep efficiency) and daytime napping. This can be due to retirement or boredom. Good sleep practices can help.
Sleep medication use in the elderly differs from that in younger people only in the longer retention time in the body. A drug's half-life – the time it takes for the body to eliminate half the drug from the bloodstream – is higher in the elderly.
This means sleep inertia due to residual sleeping pills is more likely in older people.
In general, older people are more prone to movement during sleep and sedative drugs increase the risk of falls. This is why doctors take into account a patient's age when selecting a sleeping aid. Chloral hydrate is also used in the elderly more often than in young people.
WHAT SCIENTISTS KNOW
There’s a difference in the sexes. Men lose more of the deep sleep (stages 3 and 4) than women. Daytime sleepiness is more frequent in older men than in older women.
Young and middle-aged adults typically complain of difficulty falling asleep, seniors more often experience nocturnal awakening, early morning awakenings, and non-refreshing sleep.
Some of the sleep hygiene practices recommended for insomniacs are often ignored by older people. Retired people without the regular schedule of a job are more likely to engage in daytime napping, irregular arising time, and increased time in bed compared to employed people. These practices are not conducive to trying to beat insomnia.
Insomnia affects a third of older Americans. Restless leg syndrome and sleep-disordered breathing/apnea are also more common in older people. Sleep-disordered breathing is particularly of interest because there is evidence that connects it will dementia and cognitive deficits in the elderly.
It used to be believed that the human circadian clock had a period of about 25.25 hours and that this period declined as people got older. This explained why teenagers had trouble waking up in the morning while seniors get sleepy early in the evening. However, circadian rhythm amplitude sometime stays strong in very healthy older people. Now scientists think that the intrinsic period of endogenous human circadian pacemaker is not significantly different between health old and young adults and is much closer to 24 hours. Deterioration in the suprachiasmatic nucleus may represent a pathologic rather than a normal change. Another view is that older people tend to have a narrower window in the circadian cycle to get to sleep. They are literally more set in their ways. Young people can go to bed at a different time each night and move their sleep times around much more flexibility.
Older people spend more time in bed than younger ones, but nighttime sleep is typically shallow and fragmented. Scientific measurements confirm subjective reports of decline in sleep quality with age in otherwise healthy older people. Deep sleep decreased from 18.9% during young adulthood (ages 16 to 25) to 3.4% in midlife (36 to 50). The decrease in slow-wave sleep was accompanied by decreases in growth hormone levels.
During late life, REM sleep declines gradually by about 10 minutes per decade. Sleep fragmentation, as measured by wake time, increases by 30 minutes per decade during late life.
THERMOREGULATION AND THE ELDERLY
Dutch scientists have found that elderly bodies are less capable of thermoregulation than younger ones, and give the effect of skin temperature on the ability to fall asleep and stay asleep, this may explain increased insomnia rates in seniors. (More on thermoregulation and sleep.)
The prevailing hypothesis in sleep models is the two-process model, in which sleep is a affected by circadian and homeostatic processes . The decline in sleep quality that goes along with getting old is thought to be due to alterations in both processes. Researchers at Cornell's Laboratory of Human Chronobiology found that the homeostatic process starts to go off-kilter before the circadian process as we age.
They found this by studying people of different ages.
They also found that while young adults sleep longer than middle-aged and older adults, daytime napping is essentially unchanged as we age, in the absense of other restrictions (such as retirement.)
RESEARCH
When the U.S. government started the National Insitute on Aging in the 1970s, sleep was a low priority in the medical funding community. In the past few decades the importance of sleep has been recognized, both as an important part of quality of life and as a contributor to and symptom of diseases.
The most recent National Sleep Disorders Research Plan (2003) concedes that most of the research on sleep is conducted on young adults and that there has not been enough scientific exploration of how age affects sleep. There isn’t widespread agreement on what is “normal” age-related changes in sleep patterns and therefore no going agreement on whether any medical treatment is desirable.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
The article below is from Sleepdex an online resource which has lots of information about sleep, but as insomnia appears to get worse with age – there is some quite interesting stuff as to possible causes. If you are over 60 and suffering from insomnia, then I’m sure you will find it an interesting read.
Insomnia is a common complaint in older adults. Chronic sleep difficulties affect older people more often than younger adults. The homoeostatic regulation of sleep changes as we age. Older adults typically have shallower sleep, and fragmentation is more common. Doctors prescribe sleeping aids to the elderly much more often than for young adults or kids.
Factors that contribute to insomnia in seniors may include medical illnesses and medication use, both of which are more common in older adults. Older people also have too little physical activity and reduced exposure to bright light.
There is also a fundamental age-related alteration in the neurobiology of circadian
rhythms, although scientists haven’t figured it all out.
Older people, even healthy ones, often complain about decreased sleep quality, and polysomnographic measurements of physiological indicators have confirmed the reality of these claims. Deep sleep, as a percentage of total sleep, decreases as people age, along with a decrease in growth hormone levels. During late life, REM sleep in a typical night declines about 10 minutes per decade. Wake time during the nocturnal period, a measure of sleep fragmentation, increases about 30 minutes per decade.
There’s also a chicken-and-egg question of the relationship between declining sleep quality and development of chronic illness in older adults. Does low quality sleep contribute to other physical problems or do illnesses cause the low quality sleep?
It can be unclear for any individual, and the two factors are intertwined in most people.
It is worth pointing out the distinction between insomnia and disturbed sleep. Insomnia refers to a subjective inability to fall or stay asleep, and chronic insomnia is due to circadian dysrhythmia, homeostatic dysregulation and hyperarousal.
A person can have insomnia but not disturbed sleep. When the person finally gets to sleep, he or she can sleep soundly. Young adults more typically have trouble falling asleep while old people have trouble staying asleep.
Insomnia, by this classification, often results in increased risk of depression, overall decreased productivity at work and in daytimes activities. Disturbed sleep results in symptoms like those of sleep deprivation.
As people get older, they are more apt to experience secondary insomnia due to medical conditions, and to experience sleep disorders such as apnea, restless leg syndrome, and circadian rhythm disorder. Primary insomnia and insomnia due to psychiatric problems do not increase with age.
Some common poor sleep habits are more prevalent in elderly populations – staying in bed all night even when not sleeping (leading to poor sleep efficiency) and daytime napping. This can be due to retirement or boredom. Good sleep practices can help.
Sleep medication use in the elderly differs from that in younger people only in the longer retention time in the body. A drug's half-life – the time it takes for the body to eliminate half the drug from the bloodstream – is higher in the elderly.
This means sleep inertia due to residual sleeping pills is more likely in older people.
In general, older people are more prone to movement during sleep and sedative drugs increase the risk of falls. This is why doctors take into account a patient's age when selecting a sleeping aid. Chloral hydrate is also used in the elderly more often than in young people.
WHAT SCIENTISTS KNOW
There’s a difference in the sexes. Men lose more of the deep sleep (stages 3 and 4) than women. Daytime sleepiness is more frequent in older men than in older women.
Young and middle-aged adults typically complain of difficulty falling asleep, seniors more often experience nocturnal awakening, early morning awakenings, and non-refreshing sleep.
Some of the sleep hygiene practices recommended for insomniacs are often ignored by older people. Retired people without the regular schedule of a job are more likely to engage in daytime napping, irregular arising time, and increased time in bed compared to employed people. These practices are not conducive to trying to beat insomnia.
Insomnia affects a third of older Americans. Restless leg syndrome and sleep-disordered breathing/apnea are also more common in older people. Sleep-disordered breathing is particularly of interest because there is evidence that connects it will dementia and cognitive deficits in the elderly.
It used to be believed that the human circadian clock had a period of about 25.25 hours and that this period declined as people got older. This explained why teenagers had trouble waking up in the morning while seniors get sleepy early in the evening. However, circadian rhythm amplitude sometime stays strong in very healthy older people. Now scientists think that the intrinsic period of endogenous human circadian pacemaker is not significantly different between health old and young adults and is much closer to 24 hours. Deterioration in the suprachiasmatic nucleus may represent a pathologic rather than a normal change. Another view is that older people tend to have a narrower window in the circadian cycle to get to sleep. They are literally more set in their ways. Young people can go to bed at a different time each night and move their sleep times around much more flexibility.
Older people spend more time in bed than younger ones, but nighttime sleep is typically shallow and fragmented. Scientific measurements confirm subjective reports of decline in sleep quality with age in otherwise healthy older people. Deep sleep decreased from 18.9% during young adulthood (ages 16 to 25) to 3.4% in midlife (36 to 50). The decrease in slow-wave sleep was accompanied by decreases in growth hormone levels.
During late life, REM sleep declines gradually by about 10 minutes per decade. Sleep fragmentation, as measured by wake time, increases by 30 minutes per decade during late life.
THERMOREGULATION AND THE ELDERLY
Dutch scientists have found that elderly bodies are less capable of thermoregulation than younger ones, and give the effect of skin temperature on the ability to fall asleep and stay asleep, this may explain increased insomnia rates in seniors. (More on thermoregulation and sleep.)
The prevailing hypothesis in sleep models is the two-process model, in which sleep is a affected by circadian and homeostatic processes . The decline in sleep quality that goes along with getting old is thought to be due to alterations in both processes. Researchers at Cornell's Laboratory of Human Chronobiology found that the homeostatic process starts to go off-kilter before the circadian process as we age.
They found this by studying people of different ages.
They also found that while young adults sleep longer than middle-aged and older adults, daytime napping is essentially unchanged as we age, in the absense of other restrictions (such as retirement.)
RESEARCH
When the U.S. government started the National Insitute on Aging in the 1970s, sleep was a low priority in the medical funding community. In the past few decades the importance of sleep has been recognized, both as an important part of quality of life and as a contributor to and symptom of diseases.
The most recent National Sleep Disorders Research Plan (2003) concedes that most of the research on sleep is conducted on young adults and that there has not been enough scientific exploration of how age affects sleep. There isn’t widespread agreement on what is “normal” age-related changes in sleep patterns and therefore no going agreement on whether any medical treatment is desirable.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Saturday, 6 November 2010
Depression and Insomnia
Depression and Insomnia
The information below is based on an article by Dr. Gregg D. Jacobs published recently in a US Medical Publication. If your insomnia is triggered by depression – the article may help you shed some light on the subject.
Bearing in mind the number of people suffering from depression, not just in America but Worldwide, the fact that insomnia is one of the main side effects means that depression is one of the major sources of insomnia. Recognising this and helping to treat the cause can be one of the key cures for insomnia.
I hope you find Dr Jacobs article interesting…
Everyone feels sad or blue at times. However, about 10-20% of Americans experience clinical depression at some point in their lives and the numbers are growing.
Insomnia is a hallmark symptom of depression; some depressed individuals may instead exhibit excessive sleep, called hypersomnia. Insomniacs also exhibit higher levels of depression than normal sleepers, although they generally do not have higher levels of depression than patients with other health problems such as pain, infertility, or heart diseases.
Furthermore, the majority of patients who visit their doctor with a primary complaint of insomnia do not have a diagnosable depressive disorder. And for those patients who do, research has shown that, for some of these individuals, depression can be the consequence of insomnia, not the cause.
Depressed people exhibit a number of other sleep disturbances in addition to insomnia, including reduced deep sleep, increased light sleep, and excessive dream sleep. They enter dream sleep earlier in the night and spend a greater percentage of time in dream sleep than nondepressed individuals. Research also suggests that the dream content of depressed people is more depressing than that of nondepressed people.
Another physiological abnormality associated with depression is a flattened body temperature rhythm; that is, a depressed person's body temperature does not rise and fall as much during the day as that of a nondepressed person. Interestingly, insomniacs exhibit the same problem with their body temperature rhythm. This irregular rhythm in depressed people, which may be the result of the increased fatigue and reduced physical activity that accompanies depression, may ultimately exacerbate insomnia and depressed mood.
To help you determine whether you have major depression, think about whether you have experienced either a relatively prominent, persistent depressed mood nearly every day for a two week period in the past few months or loss of interest or pleasure in almost all usual activities or pastimes. If you have experienced either of these two symptoms, you may have clinical depression and should consider seeking professional evaluation.
Although insomnia can be an important symptom of depression, it is not equivalent to depression. There has been a consistent tendency for both insomniacs and health professionals to conceptualize insomnia as a psychiatric problem, which is erroneous and leads to ineffective treatment. The majority of cases of chronic insomnia are caused by cognitive and behavioral factors, not psychiatric factors, and must therefore be treated with cognitive-behavioral therapy, not psychotherapy or antidepressant medication. . Regarding insomnia as a psychiatric disorder just reinforces the stigma associated with insomnia and diminished self-esteem.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
The information below is based on an article by Dr. Gregg D. Jacobs published recently in a US Medical Publication. If your insomnia is triggered by depression – the article may help you shed some light on the subject.
Bearing in mind the number of people suffering from depression, not just in America but Worldwide, the fact that insomnia is one of the main side effects means that depression is one of the major sources of insomnia. Recognising this and helping to treat the cause can be one of the key cures for insomnia.
I hope you find Dr Jacobs article interesting…
Everyone feels sad or blue at times. However, about 10-20% of Americans experience clinical depression at some point in their lives and the numbers are growing.
Insomnia is a hallmark symptom of depression; some depressed individuals may instead exhibit excessive sleep, called hypersomnia. Insomniacs also exhibit higher levels of depression than normal sleepers, although they generally do not have higher levels of depression than patients with other health problems such as pain, infertility, or heart diseases.
Furthermore, the majority of patients who visit their doctor with a primary complaint of insomnia do not have a diagnosable depressive disorder. And for those patients who do, research has shown that, for some of these individuals, depression can be the consequence of insomnia, not the cause.
Depressed people exhibit a number of other sleep disturbances in addition to insomnia, including reduced deep sleep, increased light sleep, and excessive dream sleep. They enter dream sleep earlier in the night and spend a greater percentage of time in dream sleep than nondepressed individuals. Research also suggests that the dream content of depressed people is more depressing than that of nondepressed people.
Another physiological abnormality associated with depression is a flattened body temperature rhythm; that is, a depressed person's body temperature does not rise and fall as much during the day as that of a nondepressed person. Interestingly, insomniacs exhibit the same problem with their body temperature rhythm. This irregular rhythm in depressed people, which may be the result of the increased fatigue and reduced physical activity that accompanies depression, may ultimately exacerbate insomnia and depressed mood.
To help you determine whether you have major depression, think about whether you have experienced either a relatively prominent, persistent depressed mood nearly every day for a two week period in the past few months or loss of interest or pleasure in almost all usual activities or pastimes. If you have experienced either of these two symptoms, you may have clinical depression and should consider seeking professional evaluation.
Although insomnia can be an important symptom of depression, it is not equivalent to depression. There has been a consistent tendency for both insomniacs and health professionals to conceptualize insomnia as a psychiatric problem, which is erroneous and leads to ineffective treatment. The majority of cases of chronic insomnia are caused by cognitive and behavioral factors, not psychiatric factors, and must therefore be treated with cognitive-behavioral therapy, not psychotherapy or antidepressant medication. . Regarding insomnia as a psychiatric disorder just reinforces the stigma associated with insomnia and diminished self-esteem.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Insomnia Definitions – S to T
Some more definitions – this time Sl to T
Over the last months or so I have been posting definitions to help you bust the jargon when you are researching insomnia related issues.
Here are some more which I hope are of some help to you – most of them relating to Sleep related definitions.
Sleep Apnea – A condition where the sufferer momentarily stops breathing during sleep. I will blog about this problem separately soon as it is a major cause of insomnia.
Sleep Bruxism – This is where the sufferer constantly grinds his/her teeth during the night waking themselves (and others in the process). Not only can it lead to insomnia but also leads to problems with teeth and dental issues.
Sleep Homeostat – This is an internal body control mechanism which is controlled by brain chemicals such as melatonin. It basically makes sure that in an ideal world that you get enough sleep.
Sleep onset insomnia – This is a type of insomnia where you find it difficult to fall asleep in the first place.
Sleep Maintenance insomnia – This is different to the sleep onset insomnia as the sufferer doesn’t have a problem actually falling asleep – they have a problem staying asleep.
Sleep related breathing disorders – These cover a range of sleep breathing related issues which includes sleep apnea, but also includes difficulty in breathing and too shallow breathing.
Sleep related movement disorders – This is a group of disorders where the suffer makes involuntary movements during the night. These sudden movements can either keep the sufferer from falling asleep or wake them abruptly during the night. One of the most common forms of this is Restless leg Syndrome.
Sleep wake Cycle – Pattern of sleep and wakefulness that is determined by circadian rythms and sleep homeostat.
Stimulus Control Therapy- A treatment that aims to help insomnia by encouraging the brain to link to certain cues. This may be simply getting into bed, the dark etc where the sufferer immediately associates these with sleep.
Transient Insomnia- This is a temporary form of insomnia which tends to only last a few nights.
Tryptophan – This is an amino acid used to make serotonin. This is then turned into the sleep hormone Melatonin
Well that’s it for now – hope it’s been of some interest. Remember there are a few other blogs on this site which help take you through the alphabet if you are looking out for any other definitions.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Over the last months or so I have been posting definitions to help you bust the jargon when you are researching insomnia related issues.
Here are some more which I hope are of some help to you – most of them relating to Sleep related definitions.
Sleep Apnea – A condition where the sufferer momentarily stops breathing during sleep. I will blog about this problem separately soon as it is a major cause of insomnia.
Sleep Bruxism – This is where the sufferer constantly grinds his/her teeth during the night waking themselves (and others in the process). Not only can it lead to insomnia but also leads to problems with teeth and dental issues.
Sleep Homeostat – This is an internal body control mechanism which is controlled by brain chemicals such as melatonin. It basically makes sure that in an ideal world that you get enough sleep.
Sleep onset insomnia – This is a type of insomnia where you find it difficult to fall asleep in the first place.
Sleep Maintenance insomnia – This is different to the sleep onset insomnia as the sufferer doesn’t have a problem actually falling asleep – they have a problem staying asleep.
Sleep related breathing disorders – These cover a range of sleep breathing related issues which includes sleep apnea, but also includes difficulty in breathing and too shallow breathing.
Sleep related movement disorders – This is a group of disorders where the suffer makes involuntary movements during the night. These sudden movements can either keep the sufferer from falling asleep or wake them abruptly during the night. One of the most common forms of this is Restless leg Syndrome.
Sleep wake Cycle – Pattern of sleep and wakefulness that is determined by circadian rythms and sleep homeostat.
Stimulus Control Therapy- A treatment that aims to help insomnia by encouraging the brain to link to certain cues. This may be simply getting into bed, the dark etc where the sufferer immediately associates these with sleep.
Transient Insomnia- This is a temporary form of insomnia which tends to only last a few nights.
Tryptophan – This is an amino acid used to make serotonin. This is then turned into the sleep hormone Melatonin
Well that’s it for now – hope it’s been of some interest. Remember there are a few other blogs on this site which help take you through the alphabet if you are looking out for any other definitions.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Balancing your blood sugar to help cure insomnia
Balancing your blood sugar
Sleep can often be affected by hunger. This means that eating in a way that will keep your blood sugar steady during the daytime will help your sleep by ensuring it isn’t then affected by hunger!
Here are some top tips on things that uou can do to help balance your blood sugar to help sleep and get over bouts of insomnia.
1. Don’t starve or stuff yourself!
Whatever you do – don’t stuff your face and over eat at bedtime. It can lead to discomfort that can prevent you from sleeping soundly.
One of the other problems with eating lots late at night is that it causes a massive surge in body temperature – which in turn leads to stopping people from being able to drop off to sleep.
There are also issues with not eating enough before bedtime – so don’t eat too little before bedtime so you feel hungry. Not eating enough can lead to hunger pangs which can keep you from falling asleep and or cause you to wake up in the middle of the night. Also your body needs nutrients to repair itself.
2. Eat low GI foods
GI means Glypercaemic index. Gypercaemic Index is a measure of the rate by which a food raises sugar in the blood.
Carbohydrates are a particular food with a high Glypercaemic Index. Foods in this group include things like bread, chips ,pasta, rice, couscous, pastries, biscuits, cakes, buns, crisps, sweets and fizzy drinks. All these foods have one thing in common – they are all converted by the body into glucose quickly. This causes the blood sugar level in the blood to rise rapidly.
But remember that there are some carbohydrates with a low Glypercaemic Index – these tend to be more of the wholemeal/brown versions of food – so things like wholemeal bread, bran flakes, porridge, sweet potatoes, wholewheat pasta, brown rice, baked potatoes, and anything containing large amounts of fibre.
The benefit of these low GI foods is that they take a really long time to digest. This has the added advantage of making the glucose in them to be released more slowly. This then has the positive effect of keeping your blood sugar steady – which then leads you to feeling full for longer.
This is great if you are struggling to sleep by keeping waking up in the night because you are hungry. (The same principal also works for when you have breakfast with low GI items which can keep you full up at work till lunchtime!)
3. Fruits, vegetables and low fat dairy products
For a low GI diet, as well as eating these slow release carbohydrates – you also need to include lots of fruit, vegetables, beans and pulses. It would also help if you eat low fat dairy products such as yoghurt, skimmed milk and cheese. This helps you to have a more balanced diet.
So you see – you don’t have to eat masses before bedtime so that you don’t wake up during the night hungry. Doing this can cause a negative effect – you are much better eating a low GI diet – so that you stay hungry longer whilst remaining healthy.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Sleep can often be affected by hunger. This means that eating in a way that will keep your blood sugar steady during the daytime will help your sleep by ensuring it isn’t then affected by hunger!
Here are some top tips on things that uou can do to help balance your blood sugar to help sleep and get over bouts of insomnia.
1. Don’t starve or stuff yourself!
Whatever you do – don’t stuff your face and over eat at bedtime. It can lead to discomfort that can prevent you from sleeping soundly.
One of the other problems with eating lots late at night is that it causes a massive surge in body temperature – which in turn leads to stopping people from being able to drop off to sleep.
There are also issues with not eating enough before bedtime – so don’t eat too little before bedtime so you feel hungry. Not eating enough can lead to hunger pangs which can keep you from falling asleep and or cause you to wake up in the middle of the night. Also your body needs nutrients to repair itself.
2. Eat low GI foods
GI means Glypercaemic index. Gypercaemic Index is a measure of the rate by which a food raises sugar in the blood.
Carbohydrates are a particular food with a high Glypercaemic Index. Foods in this group include things like bread, chips ,pasta, rice, couscous, pastries, biscuits, cakes, buns, crisps, sweets and fizzy drinks. All these foods have one thing in common – they are all converted by the body into glucose quickly. This causes the blood sugar level in the blood to rise rapidly.
But remember that there are some carbohydrates with a low Glypercaemic Index – these tend to be more of the wholemeal/brown versions of food – so things like wholemeal bread, bran flakes, porridge, sweet potatoes, wholewheat pasta, brown rice, baked potatoes, and anything containing large amounts of fibre.
The benefit of these low GI foods is that they take a really long time to digest. This has the added advantage of making the glucose in them to be released more slowly. This then has the positive effect of keeping your blood sugar steady – which then leads you to feeling full for longer.
This is great if you are struggling to sleep by keeping waking up in the night because you are hungry. (The same principal also works for when you have breakfast with low GI items which can keep you full up at work till lunchtime!)
3. Fruits, vegetables and low fat dairy products
For a low GI diet, as well as eating these slow release carbohydrates – you also need to include lots of fruit, vegetables, beans and pulses. It would also help if you eat low fat dairy products such as yoghurt, skimmed milk and cheese. This helps you to have a more balanced diet.
So you see – you don’t have to eat masses before bedtime so that you don’t wake up during the night hungry. Doing this can cause a negative effect – you are much better eating a low GI diet – so that you stay hungry longer whilst remaining healthy.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Monday, 11 October 2010
Over the counter sleeping pills
Over the counter sleeping pills
Are over the counter sleeping pills any good?
Many of the over the counter sleeping pills which you can buy without prescription were originally used to treat other allergies. Then once they were found to cause drowsiness – the drug companies re-developed them and re-packaged them as insomnia cures and medications.
Antihistamines
The most common over the counter sleep remedies are probably the antihistamanes. The two most common forms of this being dipenhydramine and promethazine. They tend not to be as strong as some prescription medications and in some cases have a positive
effect on curing sleep disorders.
They can be useful with helping short term insomnia by kick starting the sufferer back into that sleep routine.
Research has shown that many of the over the counter remedies are no better than herbal remedies – so many people prefer to take something which is more natural than synthesized.
Considerations
There are a few things to consider if you are planning on taking over the counter medication. I’ll list the key ones down:
1. They shouldn’t be taken with alcohol
2. They can cause grogginess the next day if taken too late at night
3. Some are known to give the taker a very dry mouth
4. Other side effects include blurred vision or upset stomachs
Important Note:
Over the counter sleeping pills should not be taken by anyone with angina, glaucoma, prostrate or urinary infections. They should also not be taken with any anti nausea or travel sickness medication.
Tolerance
As with prescription based sleeping pills and insomnia drugs – there is the risk of building up a tolerance. This means you need to keep on increasing the dose to get the same benefits.
Nytol
Probably the best known brand of over the counter sleep remedy is Nytol. This contains the antihistamine Dipenhydramine and is often promoted as a cure for jet lag or temporary sleep disorders caused by stress. But you should not take this medication for longer than 2 weeks without seeing a GP. The other well known product similar to Nytol is Dreemon where the same advice applies.
The other antihistamine mentioned earlier is promethazine and this is the base for the other 2 well known over the counter sleep remedies – Phenergan (which is sometimes given in small doses to help babies sleep through the night and Sominex.
Hope that gives you a bit more insight into the over the counter sleep remedies –and allows you to make the decision on whether this route is right for you in your search for a good nights sleep.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Are over the counter sleeping pills any good?
Many of the over the counter sleeping pills which you can buy without prescription were originally used to treat other allergies. Then once they were found to cause drowsiness – the drug companies re-developed them and re-packaged them as insomnia cures and medications.
Antihistamines
The most common over the counter sleep remedies are probably the antihistamanes. The two most common forms of this being dipenhydramine and promethazine. They tend not to be as strong as some prescription medications and in some cases have a positive
effect on curing sleep disorders.
They can be useful with helping short term insomnia by kick starting the sufferer back into that sleep routine.
Research has shown that many of the over the counter remedies are no better than herbal remedies – so many people prefer to take something which is more natural than synthesized.
Considerations
There are a few things to consider if you are planning on taking over the counter medication. I’ll list the key ones down:
1. They shouldn’t be taken with alcohol
2. They can cause grogginess the next day if taken too late at night
3. Some are known to give the taker a very dry mouth
4. Other side effects include blurred vision or upset stomachs
Important Note:
Over the counter sleeping pills should not be taken by anyone with angina, glaucoma, prostrate or urinary infections. They should also not be taken with any anti nausea or travel sickness medication.
Tolerance
As with prescription based sleeping pills and insomnia drugs – there is the risk of building up a tolerance. This means you need to keep on increasing the dose to get the same benefits.
Nytol
Probably the best known brand of over the counter sleep remedy is Nytol. This contains the antihistamine Dipenhydramine and is often promoted as a cure for jet lag or temporary sleep disorders caused by stress. But you should not take this medication for longer than 2 weeks without seeing a GP. The other well known product similar to Nytol is Dreemon where the same advice applies.
The other antihistamine mentioned earlier is promethazine and this is the base for the other 2 well known over the counter sleep remedies – Phenergan (which is sometimes given in small doses to help babies sleep through the night and Sominex.
Hope that gives you a bit more insight into the over the counter sleep remedies –and allows you to make the decision on whether this route is right for you in your search for a good nights sleep.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Are sleeping pills a long term solution?
Are sleeping pills a long term solution?
Not so long ago sleeping pills were commonly prescribed by doctors for insomnia. But there is a move away from this by the medical profession – as doctors and sleep experts become more aware of their limitations and side effects.
That is not to say sleeping pills both prescribed and over the counter don’t have some use in certain circumstances but it certainly is not a one size fits all cure. The effects may be limited and should not always be seen as a long term cure.
Temporary Reprieve
If you suffer from chronic insomnia or particularly acute sleeping problems – you may need some temporary reprieve. This where sleeping pills can be the biggest help, by helping alleviate the problem for a short period. This can help the sufferer sometimes break the cycle of sleep depravation and get back into a sleep routine.
Doctors now believe that they see far more effective results with curing insomnia by people implementing lifestyle changes. By following various psychological and behavioural approaches noticeable benefits are often found to be greater than sleeping pills and far more long term.
But sleeping pills and over the counter remedies can often give some respite till these lifestyle changes kick in. They can be a useful crutch but they don’t offer a long term solution because they don’t treat the actual cause of the insomnia.
Masking the problem
Sleeping pills mask the problem of insomnia – they do not make it go away. The other problem sleep experts have found is that sleeping pills tend to increase stage 2 Light Sleep, whilst reducing stages 4 and 5 of the sleep process – Deep Sleep and
REM sleep.
Professor Jim Horne stated that “After a few weeks of taking sleeping tablets, most users will gain no more than 20 minutes sleep and will have only fallen asleep 15 minutes earlier” Backing up the fact that sleeping pills are not the be all and end all – they definitely are not the Holy Grail when it comes to curing insomnia.
On that basis the National Health Service in the UK, recommend that GP’s only prescribed short courses of sleeping pills to avoid the insomniac developing a dependency.
So in summary – sleeping pills should only be seen as a short term solution to sleep problems, just to help try and re-establish lost sleep patterns.
There are many behavioural and psychological cures for insomnia depending on the cause and type of insomnia that are far more effective than prescription medication or over the counter supposed cures. Hopefully you can find out more about these in some of my other blogs.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Not so long ago sleeping pills were commonly prescribed by doctors for insomnia. But there is a move away from this by the medical profession – as doctors and sleep experts become more aware of their limitations and side effects.
That is not to say sleeping pills both prescribed and over the counter don’t have some use in certain circumstances but it certainly is not a one size fits all cure. The effects may be limited and should not always be seen as a long term cure.
Temporary Reprieve
If you suffer from chronic insomnia or particularly acute sleeping problems – you may need some temporary reprieve. This where sleeping pills can be the biggest help, by helping alleviate the problem for a short period. This can help the sufferer sometimes break the cycle of sleep depravation and get back into a sleep routine.
Doctors now believe that they see far more effective results with curing insomnia by people implementing lifestyle changes. By following various psychological and behavioural approaches noticeable benefits are often found to be greater than sleeping pills and far more long term.
But sleeping pills and over the counter remedies can often give some respite till these lifestyle changes kick in. They can be a useful crutch but they don’t offer a long term solution because they don’t treat the actual cause of the insomnia.
Masking the problem
Sleeping pills mask the problem of insomnia – they do not make it go away. The other problem sleep experts have found is that sleeping pills tend to increase stage 2 Light Sleep, whilst reducing stages 4 and 5 of the sleep process – Deep Sleep and
REM sleep.
Professor Jim Horne stated that “After a few weeks of taking sleeping tablets, most users will gain no more than 20 minutes sleep and will have only fallen asleep 15 minutes earlier” Backing up the fact that sleeping pills are not the be all and end all – they definitely are not the Holy Grail when it comes to curing insomnia.
On that basis the National Health Service in the UK, recommend that GP’s only prescribed short courses of sleeping pills to avoid the insomniac developing a dependency.
So in summary – sleeping pills should only be seen as a short term solution to sleep problems, just to help try and re-establish lost sleep patterns.
There are many behavioural and psychological cures for insomnia depending on the cause and type of insomnia that are far more effective than prescription medication or over the counter supposed cures. Hopefully you can find out more about these in some of my other blogs.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Wednesday, 6 October 2010
Insomnia Jargon Buster R-So
Hi there
Jargon Busting – R-So!
Here’s are a few more explanations of definitions that you’ll probably come across if you’re trying to understand your insomnia. Hope it sheds a bit of light on the subject.
RAPID EYE MOVEMENT (REM) – This is the type of sleep which occurs during sleep stage 5 when the brain is really active. This is seen by many experts as the best type of sleep and usually involves the eyes moving around quickly when the eyelids are closed. Now you know where the band got their name from!!
RESTLESS LEG SYNDROME (RLS) – This is where the sufferer is constantly woken up during sleep by involuntary movements of the limbs – usually causing a sudden jolt and disrupting sleep.
SERATONIN – This a substance that the body makes which then helps make the sleep hormone MELATONIN. You’ll sometimes find it referred to as 5HT.
SHORT TERM INSOMNIA – These are bouts of insomnia which can still be severe which last up to one month.
SOMNAMBULISM – This is just another term for Sleepwalking, where people get up and move around during the night without being properly awake.
I’ll stop with definitions for the time being, but there are a load of definitions all starting with the word SLEEP, which I’ll try and explain the actual meaning of shortly.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Jargon Busting – R-So!
Here’s are a few more explanations of definitions that you’ll probably come across if you’re trying to understand your insomnia. Hope it sheds a bit of light on the subject.
RAPID EYE MOVEMENT (REM) – This is the type of sleep which occurs during sleep stage 5 when the brain is really active. This is seen by many experts as the best type of sleep and usually involves the eyes moving around quickly when the eyelids are closed. Now you know where the band got their name from!!
RESTLESS LEG SYNDROME (RLS) – This is where the sufferer is constantly woken up during sleep by involuntary movements of the limbs – usually causing a sudden jolt and disrupting sleep.
SERATONIN – This a substance that the body makes which then helps make the sleep hormone MELATONIN. You’ll sometimes find it referred to as 5HT.
SHORT TERM INSOMNIA – These are bouts of insomnia which can still be severe which last up to one month.
SOMNAMBULISM – This is just another term for Sleepwalking, where people get up and move around during the night without being properly awake.
I’ll stop with definitions for the time being, but there are a load of definitions all starting with the word SLEEP, which I’ll try and explain the actual meaning of shortly.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Monday, 13 September 2010
Understanding Sleeping Pills – The Z Drugs & Anti Depressants
The Z Drugs include hypnotic medications such as Zolpidem, Zopiclone and Zaleplon.
On the whole these drugs cause less problems than the benzodiazepines and do help to promote sleep. But there are still serious problems associated with dependency and withdrawal.
There is also a much bigger risk of being involved in a car accident the day after taking the drugs.
The Z drugs are also much more expensive than the benzodiazepines but there is no evidence to say that they work any better. In fact doctors find the drugs work differently depending on each patient – so we have to find out the right combination or individual dose.
Anti depressants are often prescribed for insomnia as they can sometimes work as sedatives in low doses. The most common anti depressants include – Amitripyline, Dothiepin, Clonazepam, Venlafaxine, Mirtazapine and Trazadone.
Evidence show that these drugs can work to help with insomnia where the insomnia is linked to depression.
But again there can be a number of common side effects. As well as dry mouth and blurred vision – the drugs can also cause difficulty urinating or sweating. In some cases they can cause anirregular heartbeat.
People also need to be careful when coming off anti depressants as this needs to be gradual to avoid any rebound effects.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
On the whole these drugs cause less problems than the benzodiazepines and do help to promote sleep. But there are still serious problems associated with dependency and withdrawal.
There is also a much bigger risk of being involved in a car accident the day after taking the drugs.
The Z drugs are also much more expensive than the benzodiazepines but there is no evidence to say that they work any better. In fact doctors find the drugs work differently depending on each patient – so we have to find out the right combination or individual dose.
Anti depressants are often prescribed for insomnia as they can sometimes work as sedatives in low doses. The most common anti depressants include – Amitripyline, Dothiepin, Clonazepam, Venlafaxine, Mirtazapine and Trazadone.
Evidence show that these drugs can work to help with insomnia where the insomnia is linked to depression.
But again there can be a number of common side effects. As well as dry mouth and blurred vision – the drugs can also cause difficulty urinating or sweating. In some cases they can cause anirregular heartbeat.
People also need to be careful when coming off anti depressants as this needs to be gradual to avoid any rebound effects.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Definitions of Insomnia - L to P
More jargon busting descriptions for terms you’ll come across when researching insomnia – this week L through to P.
LIGHT SLEEP – the second stage of sleep.
MELATONIN – a hormone produced in the pineal gland that promotes sleep. More of this is produced naturally in dark conditions. Supplements can be brought from pharmacists to top up levels and aid sleep.
NARCOLEPSY – a sleep disorder linked to excessive daytime sleepiness. The sufferer can fall asleep without any warning.
NON RAPID EYE MOVEMENT (NREM) – The type of sleep which occurs during sleep stages 1 to 4 . It’s different from REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep in that there are not any darting eye movements.
PARASOMNIAS – Sleep disorders involving moving, seeing or hearing things that don’t exist.
PERIODIC LIMB MOVEMENT DISORDER – This is where a sufferers limbs move involuntarily whilst they are asleep.
PLACEBO – This is where a patient is given an inactive substance to compare its effects with those of an actual treatment. Or a patient can benefit from just believing that they have received a treatment and subliminally feel better.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
LIGHT SLEEP – the second stage of sleep.
MELATONIN – a hormone produced in the pineal gland that promotes sleep. More of this is produced naturally in dark conditions. Supplements can be brought from pharmacists to top up levels and aid sleep.
NARCOLEPSY – a sleep disorder linked to excessive daytime sleepiness. The sufferer can fall asleep without any warning.
NON RAPID EYE MOVEMENT (NREM) – The type of sleep which occurs during sleep stages 1 to 4 . It’s different from REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep in that there are not any darting eye movements.
PARASOMNIAS – Sleep disorders involving moving, seeing or hearing things that don’t exist.
PERIODIC LIMB MOVEMENT DISORDER – This is where a sufferers limbs move involuntarily whilst they are asleep.
PLACEBO – This is where a patient is given an inactive substance to compare its effects with those of an actual treatment. Or a patient can benefit from just believing that they have received a treatment and subliminally feel better.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Eat a lettuce sandwich before bedtime helps you sleep easier!
This is a really weird bit of advice that someone told me about this weekend. It was apparently mentioned on a BBC documentary a couple of years ago as a way to help cure insomnia.
The advice on a programme about how to get to sleep faster and stay asleep suggested you eat a lettuce sandwich before bedtime.
So is there any science behind this or is it just an old wives tail?
We traced back and it appears that this is the basis of a very old English recipe for curing insomnia dating back to the eighteenth century.
So I asked Maureen Lumsden a nutritionalist friend of mine to explain why this should be?
It turns out that there is a lot of truth in this – but the sandwich needs to be made more specifically of the lettuce stem and it needs to be fresh. It’s the white latex from the plant’s stem — known as lettuce opium — that does the job.
Looking into it further Food expert and Author Anne McIntyre explains in her book Simple Home Remedies for Common Ailments that the substance in the plant’s stem “looks and works the same way as the opium poppy.”
So salad for supper tonight – At least it will be healthier than biscuits or a slice of toast!
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
The advice on a programme about how to get to sleep faster and stay asleep suggested you eat a lettuce sandwich before bedtime.
So is there any science behind this or is it just an old wives tail?
We traced back and it appears that this is the basis of a very old English recipe for curing insomnia dating back to the eighteenth century.
So I asked Maureen Lumsden a nutritionalist friend of mine to explain why this should be?
It turns out that there is a lot of truth in this – but the sandwich needs to be made more specifically of the lettuce stem and it needs to be fresh. It’s the white latex from the plant’s stem — known as lettuce opium — that does the job.
Looking into it further Food expert and Author Anne McIntyre explains in her book Simple Home Remedies for Common Ailments that the substance in the plant’s stem “looks and works the same way as the opium poppy.”
So salad for supper tonight – At least it will be healthier than biscuits or a slice of toast!
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Learn about sleeping pills- the downside of Benzodiazepines
This group of sleeping pills includes temazepam, nitrazepam , lormetazepam and diazepam.
They are often prescribed to insomniacs to help calm people down and make them feel sleepy. These drugs tend to be prescribes when the doctor believes the source of the anxiety is anxiety related.
But one of the big downsides with drugs from the benzodiazepines family is “tolerance”. As the body gets used to the drug – the higher the level it needs to have the same effect.
Other serious problems include dependency. This means that you can only ever get to sleep with the pills. But to make matters worse – symptoms appear to get worse when people stop taking the drugs.
There are also side effects to taking benzodiazepines such as drowsiness and dizziness. Research has also linked these side effects as increasing the risk of road accidents.
One final thing to point out – if you’re taking benzodiazepines – whatever you do, don’t drink alcohol. The sleeping pills enhance the effects of the alcohol by 100% or more!
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
They are often prescribed to insomniacs to help calm people down and make them feel sleepy. These drugs tend to be prescribes when the doctor believes the source of the anxiety is anxiety related.
But one of the big downsides with drugs from the benzodiazepines family is “tolerance”. As the body gets used to the drug – the higher the level it needs to have the same effect.
Other serious problems include dependency. This means that you can only ever get to sleep with the pills. But to make matters worse – symptoms appear to get worse when people stop taking the drugs.
There are also side effects to taking benzodiazepines such as drowsiness and dizziness. Research has also linked these side effects as increasing the risk of road accidents.
One final thing to point out – if you’re taking benzodiazepines – whatever you do, don’t drink alcohol. The sleeping pills enhance the effects of the alcohol by 100% or more!
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Friday, 20 August 2010
Insomnia Definitions – D & E
More definitions of key insomnia terms – this time letters D & E
I recently detailed definitions of terms relating to insomnia for letters A,B & C.
Here are some further definitions for the letters D and E, I really hope they help clear things up and help you to understand some of the things you hear about when you are researching cures.
There are so many weird and wonderful scientific terms – when I first ended up suffering from insomnia it took me ages to research and work out what each of the things meant.
So I hope these definitions help you understand more about you condition and cures.
DIURETIC – Something that promotes urination! Taking diuretics like tea and coffee before bedtime can lead to numerous visits to the toilet during the night.
DEEP SLEEP – A heavy, relaxing sleep state – sometimes also known as Slow Wave Sleep or Delta Sleep.
DROWSINESS – When your brainwaves slow down. This is the first stage of sleep and a manifestation of tiredness.
DELAYED SLEEP PHASE SYNDROME (DSPS) – This is where your body clock is running late. It basically stops the sufferer from finally falling asleep till very late then having severe problems getting up in the morning.
DOUBLE BLIND – A technique for working out cures for insomnia where placebos are given to some patients.
EPWORTH SLEEP SCALE – A scale devised to measure sleepiness during normal daytime activity.
So there you go – that’s letters D & E done. I’ll post some more definitions soon. Hope it helps bust the jargon used on many sites.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
I recently detailed definitions of terms relating to insomnia for letters A,B & C.
Here are some further definitions for the letters D and E, I really hope they help clear things up and help you to understand some of the things you hear about when you are researching cures.
There are so many weird and wonderful scientific terms – when I first ended up suffering from insomnia it took me ages to research and work out what each of the things meant.
So I hope these definitions help you understand more about you condition and cures.
DIURETIC – Something that promotes urination! Taking diuretics like tea and coffee before bedtime can lead to numerous visits to the toilet during the night.
DEEP SLEEP – A heavy, relaxing sleep state – sometimes also known as Slow Wave Sleep or Delta Sleep.
DROWSINESS – When your brainwaves slow down. This is the first stage of sleep and a manifestation of tiredness.
DELAYED SLEEP PHASE SYNDROME (DSPS) – This is where your body clock is running late. It basically stops the sufferer from finally falling asleep till very late then having severe problems getting up in the morning.
DOUBLE BLIND – A technique for working out cures for insomnia where placebos are given to some patients.
EPWORTH SLEEP SCALE – A scale devised to measure sleepiness during normal daytime activity.
So there you go – that’s letters D & E done. I’ll post some more definitions soon. Hope it helps bust the jargon used on many sites.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Insomnia and Reflexology – Cycle Balancer
Another reflexology technique called Cycle Balancer
Here’s another reflexology technique I came across which is meant to help you relax before bedtime.
To help balance your sleep/awake cycle, try this DIY reflexology technique. It stimulates your pineal gland which produces the sleep hormone Melatin.
Here goes...
Using your thumb and forefinger, apply pressure to the fleshy area about two thirds of the way up your big toes for a couple of minutes. Leave it a minute and then repeat, try and do it for about 10 minutes.
I find that this technique always works best if carried out an hour or so before bedtime.
Give it a go, there’s nothing to lose and it doesn’t cost anything to try!
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Here’s another reflexology technique I came across which is meant to help you relax before bedtime.
To help balance your sleep/awake cycle, try this DIY reflexology technique. It stimulates your pineal gland which produces the sleep hormone Melatin.
Here goes...
Using your thumb and forefinger, apply pressure to the fleshy area about two thirds of the way up your big toes for a couple of minutes. Leave it a minute and then repeat, try and do it for about 10 minutes.
I find that this technique always works best if carried out an hour or so before bedtime.
Give it a go, there’s nothing to lose and it doesn’t cost anything to try!
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Tuesday, 17 August 2010
The ABC of Insomnia
The ABC of Insomnia – Definitions of key insomnia terms for letters A,B & C
Here are a selection of key terms you may hear about regularly whilst researching about insomnia. If you’re like me you’ll have had no idea about what they meant at first – so hopefully I’ve done some of the hard work for you.
Please find below definitions for some of the key terms beginning with A,B or C. I’ll post definitions of other key definitions at some time in future blogs.
ACTIGRAM – Electronic devices used by specialists to measure brain activity. This in turn helps measure sleep and wakefulness.
ADVANCED SLEEP PHASE SYNDROME – Sometimes known as ASPS. This is a type of insomnia where the sufferer has problems staying awake in the evening, but then cannot sleep beyond the early hours.
ANTIHISTAMINES – More well known for treating allergies or being used to ease nettle or insect stings – they are known to cause drowsiness so are often used to help aid sleep and cure insomnia.
BENZODIAZEPINES – This is a group of drugs which are regularly used to treat anxiety sufferers. By curing the anxiety people have it can help alleviate insomnia.
CIRCADIAN RHYTHM – This is more commonly known as your own body clock – and is what controls the cycle of when you are awake and when you are asleep.
CIRCADIAN RHYTHM DISORDER – Disorders to your body clock which affect you ability to sleep at certain times.
COGNITIVE BEHAVIOUR THERAPY – A treatment for insomnia which works through the power of positive thought.
CHRONOC INSOMNIA – Insomnia that lasts longer than a month is categorized as “chronic”.
Watch out for more helpful definitions in future blogs.
Good luck with your finding some relief from your insomnia.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
Here are a selection of key terms you may hear about regularly whilst researching about insomnia. If you’re like me you’ll have had no idea about what they meant at first – so hopefully I’ve done some of the hard work for you.
Please find below definitions for some of the key terms beginning with A,B or C. I’ll post definitions of other key definitions at some time in future blogs.
ACTIGRAM – Electronic devices used by specialists to measure brain activity. This in turn helps measure sleep and wakefulness.
ADVANCED SLEEP PHASE SYNDROME – Sometimes known as ASPS. This is a type of insomnia where the sufferer has problems staying awake in the evening, but then cannot sleep beyond the early hours.
ANTIHISTAMINES – More well known for treating allergies or being used to ease nettle or insect stings – they are known to cause drowsiness so are often used to help aid sleep and cure insomnia.
BENZODIAZEPINES – This is a group of drugs which are regularly used to treat anxiety sufferers. By curing the anxiety people have it can help alleviate insomnia.
CIRCADIAN RHYTHM – This is more commonly known as your own body clock – and is what controls the cycle of when you are awake and when you are asleep.
CIRCADIAN RHYTHM DISORDER – Disorders to your body clock which affect you ability to sleep at certain times.
COGNITIVE BEHAVIOUR THERAPY – A treatment for insomnia which works through the power of positive thought.
CHRONOC INSOMNIA – Insomnia that lasts longer than a month is categorized as “chronic”.
Watch out for more helpful definitions in future blogs.
Good luck with your finding some relief from your insomnia.
Dan Kennedy has written a free ebook on how to Cure Your Insomnia. To download it visit www.cure-your-insomnia.com
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