Unusual exercise-induced insomnia
Posted , 126 users are following.
TL;DR: I have exercise-induced insomnia for which no one has been able to explain or provide a solution.
I used to exercise regularly. I would wake up every weekday at 6am, bike to the gym, and exercise for about an hour before work. I would usually jog or do some other cardio for 20-30 minutes, then do weight training for the rest of the hour. I had help from a personal trainer, so I knew what I was doing.
I felt great, and I was in the best shape of my life. I kept this up for about 3 years, before something strange happened: I would wake up around 2 or 3am, unable to fall back asleep. I was 33 at the time, and I know sleep patterns can begin to change around this age.
At first, I noticed that I slept much deeper on days I didn't exercise (e.g. weekends). Then I began waking up in the middle of the night, but would usually go right back to sleep. It got worse. Eventually, I would wake about 4 hours after falling asleep with a feeling like an intense adrenaline rush or panic. It would last about an hour, and I would have poor, restless sleep the rest of the night.
I did not have trouble falling asleep. I was in bed at 9:30pm every night, then would read a bit with lights out by 10pm. I would fall asleep within 10 minutes.
When this started happening, I adjusted my routine. I worked out during lunch, or in the evening. No change.
I tried doing more or less cardio vs weight training. No change.
Today, if I exercise at any point during the day, I will only get four hours of good quality sleep.
I've been to several doctors, sleep specialists, and neurologists. I've had multiple take home sleep studies, as well as one on-site at a medical institution. The only thing they've been able to confirm is that I do indeed wake after 4 hours if I have exercised, but no one can tell me why. Many doctors don't even believe my story -- they think it must be psychological stress that I insist on tying to a physical cause.
I have found that walking, low-intensity biking, and hiking are all acceptable forms of exercise that do not trigger my insomnia. I can hike 10 miles and be fine. But if the hike is over very steep terrain, or if I were to jog for 10 minutes, then I have insomnia. So the intensity is definitely a factor.
The sleep studies did reveal that I have very mild sleep apnea. My doctors have told me that normally it would not warrant treatment, but it could be related. However, the usual recommendation for such a mild form is simlply "get more exercise".
My current pet theory is this: following a day of excerise, one's muscles will repair themselves during sleep, usually around 3 or 4 hours into the night. This process requires oxygen from the blood, so if my sleep apnea lowers my blood oxygen levels, then the repair process might cause it to dip below some threshold; my body panics, sending adrenaline through my body to wake me up to address whatever is happening. However, my sleep studies showed my blood oxygenation stayed over 90% the entire night.
I'm currently trying out a CPAP treatment. I'm still adjusting to it, but so far it hasn't made any difference. There's no real reason to think that it will, but I'm willing to try anything at this point.
When I tell this story, most doctors look at me like I have three heads, so I thought I would seek the collective wisdom of the Internet.
Cheers!
13 likes, 351 replies
jeremy74051 mekin
Edited
i have the same experience .
I exercised too much in the gym, leading to prolonged insomnia. currently i have autonomic dysfunction, my heart beats fast and strong all day. does anyone have a way to get over it,? i'm so desperate.
bradley99834 jeremy74051
Posted
Does anyone have a doctor they've been looking into this issue with? Wondering if this thread could be shown to them.
road01001 jeremy74051
Edited
Your heart beats fast and strong all day? Do you feel your pulse 24/7? Kinda shaking your body? Especially when lying down? If yes, it's called bounding pulse. I have the same thing and it's a nightmare trying to sleep hearing your pulse in your ear. Have you measured your blood pressure? When did this start for you? What were the circumstances?
edward123123 jeremy74051
Edited
Propranolol might help with with the fast heart.
I used to take propranolol for anxiety, so I have a supply at home. I dont have a high heart rate after exercise, but I was interested to see if propranolol would help in my case of exercise induced insomnia, but unfortunately it didnt help at all.
jeremy74051 road01001
Edited
i have the same experience . i feel my pulse 24/7 , especially lying down. i know I have a nervous system disorder
jeremy74051 road01001
Edited
i also hear my pulse in my ear when i trying to sleep.
I got this disease after suffering from overtraining syndrome for 7 months.
road01001 jeremy74051
Edited
Hey Jeremy. I have a few questions, just to make sure we're on the same page. You have exercise induced insomnia, if you exercise too much during the day you can't sleep, right? You can probably only fall asleep sometime in the morning after not being able to sleep the entire night. Do you also feel hotter at night after exercising during the day?
You also have the bounding pulse. You can feel your pulse 24/7 and it's the worst when lying down. You can also hear it in your ear when trying to sleep.
All of this started for you after a period of overexercising at the gym, right? And it's been 7 months for you now? Well it's been almost 2 years for me.
How old are you? I'm 27.
jeremy74051 road01001
Edited
that's all right . im 28
road01001 jeremy74051
Posted
I have no idea what to do about this. It's torture really. What have you tried?
rj41639 mekin
Posted
I have had sleep issues for seven years now. Back in 2016, I blamed it on the keto diet because sleeplessness was a common issue reported in the forums although not very well publicized. It had something to do with carbs needed to transport the sleep chemicals through the blood brain barrier and apparently our gut makes the majority of the melatonin we need for sleep. I stopped the diet shortly after a few months, but my sleep issues persisted on and off through the years. I always thought of it as residual sleep anxiety and I learned to cope with through CBTi. In recent years my sleep was actually getting better. Fast forward to Feb 2023, I started training in the gym 5x a day of cardio. All was good, until April when from out of nowhere I would be awoken an hour or so before my actual wake up time, and at first I ignored it but it started to happen consistently in the recent weeks. Also around the same time in Feb, I started going for a Whole Food Plant Based diet. And now I have a dilemma - some people on the diet actually report needing less sleep so I was thinking it could be the diet too. But reading a lot of posts here, I'm leaning towards the exercise regimen. Actually, I have been sedentary my entire life, but in 2016, I was in my 40s and decided to try being a bit more healthy, so I started doing the keto diet and also started cycling. I stopped the keto in a few months but continued to ride my bike a few times a week. I never made the correlation between the exercise from the bike rides to the seemingly random bouts of sleeplessness that had been happening since, until now. But my sleep issues were mostly about sleep onset, until this April and they became about sleep maintenance. I'm wondering if it's because I stopped cycling for a while (due to really cold weather recently) and started going to the gym instead later in the day to do intense cardio. I'm stopping my gym visits for a while to see what happens.
road01001 rj41639
Posted
This is how it started for me as well; waking up an hour or two before my alarm and not being able to fall back asleep. It was the very first symptom. You should go easy on yourself.
rj41639 road01001
Posted
It's funny really, I just do ellipticals, I can't believe how much it affected my sleep. How are you doing now? What were the other symptoms you started to get after that? Were you able to reverse it back and how long did it take you?
RecoveryRoad mekin
Edited
What time of the day are you getting your exercise?
You mentioned you wake up early and cycle to the gym. Is all your routine taking place early in the day/morning?
I recently took up jogging and I noticed that if I ran in the evening time it affected my ability to fall asleep. But, if i get the run in early, say before 12-noon it doesn't seem to have the same effect.
james36561 mekin
Edited
Does anyone have any updates that they can share on how they've addressed (or mitigated) this issue? I'm still searching and have yet to find the silver bullet...
edward123123 james36561
Posted
This is what I'd like to know too 😕