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Medicial Mistakes?
How many people each year suffer some type of preventable harm that contributes to their death after a hospital visit?
from 46,000 to 78,000
from 78,000 to 132,000
from 132,000 to 210,000
from 210,000 to 440,000

 
 

 Sleep and Insomnia 
 
The following is one in an ongoing series of columns entitled From Fatigued to Fantastic by . View all columns in series
To eliminate muscle and many other sources of pain, it is critical to get 8 to 9 hours of solid, deep sleep each night on a regular basis. Disordered sleep is, in my opinion, a major underlying process that perpetuates fatigue and pain.

Inadequate sleep can occur for a number of reasons. Many Americans simply do not make enough time for adequate sleep. One hundred years ago, the average American was getting 9 hours of sleep a night. Anthropologists tell us that 5000 years ago, the average night's sleep was 11 to 12 hours a night. When the sun went down, it was dark, boring, and dangerous outside, so people went to bed. When the sun came up, they woke up. The average time from sunset to sunrise is 12 hours. The use of candles initially shortened sleep time. Then light bulbs were developed followed by radio, TV, computers, etc. We are now down to an average of six and one half to seven hours of sleep a night, and this is simply not adequate to allow proper tissue repair.

Some people get inadequate sleep because of poor sleep hygiene, often occurring because pain keeps them awake. Others have insomnia because the sleep center in the brain (called the hypothalamus) is suppressed by the same process that is causing the pain.

A 2001 poll conducted by the National Sleep Foundation found that 58 percent of Americans had sleep difficulties. This had increased from 51 percent the year before. Fifteen percent of Americans use a prescription or over-the-counter sleep aid. In addition, those who slept less than six hours a night felt more stressed, angry, sad and tired than the people who got more sleep. The survey of over 1000 adults also found that only 30 percent of people reported getting the recommended 8 hours of sleep a night, down from 38 percent the year before. The average amount of sleep also decreased to under seven hours.

Natural Sleep Remedies
Most of the natural sleep remedies discussed here are not sedating, yet they will help you fall asleep and stay in deep sleep. Some are available in combination formulas as well. I recommend the following natural sleep aids:

  1. Begin with the Revitalizing Sleep Formula®, which I helped to formulate. This contains a mix of six excellent sleep herbals in a single capsule. In addition, these herbals can be helpful in alleviating both pain and anxiety. Take 1 to 4 capsules at bedtime if you have trouble staying asleep, or take the same dosage 30 to 90 minutes before bedtime if you have trouble falling asleep. You'll see the effect of a given dose on sleep the first night you take it, although the effectiveness increases with continued use. It can also be taken during the day to relieve pain and anxiety. If you’re still not getting eight to nine hours of sleep a night, add in the natural remedies below. The Revitalizing Sleep Formula herbal contains:
    • Wild lettuce extract 28 mg—one of the most powerful sleep herbals available
    • Jamaican dogwood extract 12 mg—helps with sleep and is a muscle relaxant
    • Hops extract 30 mg
    • Passionflower extract 90 mg—helps both sleep and in alleviating anxiety
    • Valerian extract 200 mg
    • Theanine 50 mg (from green tea)—helps sleep and strengthens immune function
  2. Magnesium, 75 to 250 mg and Calcium, 600 mg at bedtime, also helps sleep.
  3. Hydroxy L-tryptophan (5-HTP). Take 200 to 400 mg at night. When used for 6 weeks, a 300 to 400 mg dose has been shown to decrease fibromyalgia pain and often helps people to lose weight. 5-HTP is what your body uses to make serotonin, a neurotransmitter that helps improve the quality of sleep and can decrease levels of substance P, your body’s pain messenger. The one caution I give is that if you are taking other treatments that increase serotonin (these include anti-depressants like Prozac®, St. John's Wort, Ultram®, Desyrel®, etc.), limit the 5-HTP to 200 mg at night. It takes 6 to 12 weeks to see the full effect of 5 HTP, and it is more expensive than the other remedies. Nonetheless, it may be worthwhile in treating chronic pain.
  4. Melatonin. This is a hormone produced by the pineal gland. Although it is natural and available over the counter, this does not mean that it is without risk. My concern with any hormone is that although it might be quite safe when used within the body's normal range, I worry about toxicity when people take more than the body would normally make. For most people, all it takes to restore melatonin to normal levels is 1/2 mg. The usual dose you find in stores, however, is 3 mg, which is 6 to 10 times the dose that most people need. Except for a small subset of people, who likely have trouble absorbing it properly, the 1/2 mg dose is every bit as effective for sleep as higher doses. I would use a dose higher than 1/2 mg only if it clearly helps you sleep better than the lower dose.
  5. Delta wave sleep-inducing compact disks or cassettes. To fall asleep, you can play deep sleep-inducing tapes or CDs. If you wake up during the night, you can push your sound system's replay button. Better yet, get a CD or tape player that can replay continuously throughout the night. These tapes and CDs are available on my web site at www.vitality101.com.
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 About The Author
Jacob Teitelbaum MD is author of the popular free iPhone application "Cures A-Z" and author of the best-selling book From Fatigued to Fantastic! (3rd revised edition, Avery/Penguin Group) and Pain Free 1-2-3-A......moreJacob Teitelbaum MD
 
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