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THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy
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Insomnia and Excessive Daytime Sleepiness (EDS)

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Many sleep disorders manifest with insomnia and usually excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS). Sleep disorders may be caused by factors inside the body (intrinsic) or outside the body (extrinsic).

Inadequate sleep hygiene: Sleep is impaired by certain behaviors. They include consumption of caffeine or sympathomimetic or other stimulant drugs (typically near bedtime, but even in the afternoon for people who are particularly sensitive), exercise or excitement (eg, a thrilling TV show) late in the evening, and an irregular sleep-wake schedule. Patients who compensate for lost sleep by sleeping late or by napping further fragment nocturnal sleep.

Insomniacs should adhere to a regular awakening time and avoid naps regardless of the amount of nocturnal sleep.

Adequate sleep hygiene can improve sleep (see Table 4: Sleep and Wakefulness Disorders: Sleep HygieneTables).

Adjustment insomnia: Acute emotional stressors (eg, job loss, hospitalization) can cause insomnia. Symptoms typically remit shortly after the stressors abate; insomnia is usually transient and brief. Nevertheless, if daytime sleepiness and fatigue develop, especially if they interfere with daytime functioning, short-term treatment with hypnotics is warranted. Persistent anxiety may require specific treatment.

Psychophysiologic insomnia: Insomnia, regardless of cause, may persist well beyond resolution of precipitating factors, usually because patients feel anticipatory anxiety about the prospect of another sleepless night followed by another day of fatigue. Typically, patients spend hours in bed focusing on and brooding about their sleeplessness, and they have greater difficulty falling asleep in their own bedroom than falling asleep away from home.

Optimal treatment combines cognitive-behavioral strategies and hypnotics. Although cognitive-behavioral strategies are more difficult to implement and take longer, effects are longer lasting, up to 2 yr after treatment is ended. These strategies include sleep hygiene (particularly restriction of time in bed), education, relaxation training, stimulus control, and cognitive therapy.

Hypnotics are suitable for patients who need rapid relief and whose insomnia has had daytime effects such as EDS and fatigue. These drugs must not be used indefinitely in most cases.

Physical sleep disorders: Physical disorders may interfere with sleep and cause insomnia and EDS. Disorders that cause pain or discomfort (eg, arthritis, cancer, herniated disks), particularly those that worsen with movement, cause transient awakenings and poor sleep quality. Nocturnal seizures can also interfere with sleep.

Treatment is directed at the underlying disorder and symptom relief (eg, with bedtime analgesics).

Mental sleep disorders: Most major mental disorders can cause insomnia and EDS. About 80% of patients with major depression report these symptoms. Conversely, 40% of chronic insomniacs have a major mental disorder, most commonly a mood disorder.

Patients with depression may have initial sleeplessness or sleep maintenance insomnia. Sometimes in the depressed phase of bipolar disorder and in seasonal affective disorder, sleep is uninterrupted, but patients complain of unrelenting daytime fatigue.

If depression is accompanied by sleeplessness, antidepressants that provide more sedation (eg, amitriptyline Some Trade Names
ELAVIL
ENDEP
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, doxepin Some Trade Names
SINEQUAN
ZONALON
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, mirtazapine Some Trade Names
REMERON
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, paroxetine Some Trade Names
PAXIL
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, trazodone Some Trade Names
DESYREL
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) may be chosen. These drugs are used at regular, not low, doses to ensure correction of the depression. These drugs may cause EDS and other side effects, such as weight gain. Alternatively, any antidepressant may be used with a hypnotic.

If depression is accompanied by EDS, antidepressants with activating qualities (eg, bupropion Some Trade Names
WELLBUTRIN
ZYBAN
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, venlafaxine Some Trade Names
EFFEXOR
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, certain SSRIs such as fluoxetine Some Trade Names
PROZAC
SARAFEM
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and sertraline Some Trade Names
ZOLOFT
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) may be chosen.

Insufficient sleep syndrome (sleep deprivation): Patients with this syndrome do not sleep enough at night, despite adequate opportunity to do so, to stay alert when awake. The cause is usually various social or employment commitments. This syndrome is probably the most common cause of EDS, which disappears when sleep time is increased (eg, on weekends or vacations).

Drug-related sleep disorders: Drug-related sleep disorders: Insomnia and EDS can result from chronic use of CNS stimulants (eg, amphetamines, caffeine), hypnotics (eg, benzodiazepines), other sedatives, antimetabolite chemotherapy, anticonvulsants (eg, phenytoin Some Trade Names
DILANTIN
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), oral contraceptives, methyldopa Some Trade Names
ALDOMET
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, propranolol Some Trade Names
INDERAL
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, alcohol, and thyroid hormone preparations (see Table 2: Sleep and Wakefulness Disorders: Some Drugs That Interfere With SleepTables). Commonly prescribed hypnotics can cause irritability and apathy and reduce mental alertness. Many psychoactive drugs can induce abnormal movements during sleep.

Insomnia can develop during withdrawal of CNS depressants (eg, barbiturates, opioids, sedatives), tricyclic antidepressants, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, or illicit drugs (eg, cocaine, heroin, marijuana, phencyclidine Some Trade Names
No US trade name
Click for Drug Monograph
). Abrupt withdrawal of hypnotics or sedatives can cause nervousness, tremors, and seizures.

Last full review/revision April 2008 by Karl Doghramji, MD

Content last modified April 2008

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