News1 min ago
Getting Off To Sleep
8 Answers
I have had difficulty in staying asleep through the night, for many years. Although I usually go to sleep quite easily, I wake up a lot in the night, every couple of hours, for no reason, and then usually go back to sleep again. I am consequently always tired during the day. Also I have caught a lot of viruses over the last few years. My thyroid has 'borderline' underactive for a long time. Anyway doctor put me on 25mg Levothyroxine around four months ago. I find I am not getting as many sore throats/viruses as I was (although I do take zinc as well). But I have found that over the past two or three weeks, I just cannot get off to sleep and end up taking a sleeping tablet at around 1.30am. I wonder of I should stop taking the Levothyroxine? If I try it and see if I get off to sleep better, do I just stop taking the tablets straightaway, or do it gradually (i.e. half a tablet for a couple of days and then stop, or maybe one every other day?). Is it safe to just stop taking them? If it doesnt make any difference with my getting off to sleep ( how long will it take to get it out of my system?), should I then just start taking them again? Thanks in advance for all your advice, as usual.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by smurfchops. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.apparently we all used to wake in the middle of the night.
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Segmen ted_sle ep
We'd read the Bible, make love, visit the neighbours or whatever until we felt tired again, then go back to bed.
I suppose it depends on what exactly you want to do with your night. If I can't sleep I just get up and read, play patience etc; but I don't work and don't have a lot of morning appointments I have to get to in time.
http://
We'd read the Bible, make love, visit the neighbours or whatever until we felt tired again, then go back to bed.
I suppose it depends on what exactly you want to do with your night. If I can't sleep I just get up and read, play patience etc; but I don't work and don't have a lot of morning appointments I have to get to in time.
Like Jno, I suit myself when it comes to sleep unless I need to be up at a specific time for something. Many days I take my dogs out at 4am for a good run when its quiet, then I come home and we all go back to bed. When it was so hot, we would stay up late at night and the dogs would hunt the garden then sleep from about 2 am in the cool of the morning. Its one of the advantages of being retired.
I seriously don't think you should mess around with your meds without talking to the doctor first.
I seriously don't think you should mess around with your meds without talking to the doctor first.
You might find something worth reading here, Smurfchops:
http:// www.nhs .uk/Liv ewell/s leep/Pa ges/sle ep-home .aspx
I can't recall ever getting more than an hour or two of continuous sleep at a time, all the way from childhood. (I'll discount the time that I slept for 46 hours continuously, because that was after taking valium when I'd not slept at all for a fortnight). I find the the best thing to do when I can't get to sleep is simply to do something else instead for a while. Reading a book seems to help.
http://
I can't recall ever getting more than an hour or two of continuous sleep at a time, all the way from childhood. (I'll discount the time that I slept for 46 hours continuously, because that was after taking valium when I'd not slept at all for a fortnight). I find the the best thing to do when I can't get to sleep is simply to do something else instead for a while. Reading a book seems to help.