When does your pain kick into high gear? For some it’s
first thing in the morning, others at random times, but for most with
fibromyalgia, the pain seems amplified at night. You know the routine: you try
to be social and hang with a friend for dinner, but you have to come home early
because you’re in agony. Or you actually made it to work today and successfully
managed to block out the pain all day, but now that you’re home it feels like
all the pain you were supposed to feel is happening right now.
Sleep is not even an option at this point. You lie
there, tossing if you’re able, with your muscles tensed and in more pain than
you can remember. Of course, there are other nights where the pain isn’t that
intense. So what gives? As always, a journal of diet and activities can be
helpful in determining if there are any particular triggers that seem to
exacerbate the pain. But what if there still is no apparent explanation?
Research shows that
with fibromyalgia, there is an automatic arousal in
the brain during sleep. Frequent disruptions prevent the
important restorative processes from occurring. Growth hormone is
mostly produced during sleep. Without restorative sleep and the surge of growth
hormone, muscles may not heal and neurotransmitters (like the mood chemical
serotonin) are not replenished.
The lack of a good night’s sleep makes people
with fibromyalgia wake up feeling tired and fatigued. The result: The
body can’t recuperate from the day’s stresses — all of which overwhelms the
system, creating a great sensitivity to pain.” This sounds like a very vicious
cycle.
Some speculate that by the end of the day our minds are
beginning to clear as we focus on resting which makes us more aware of our
fibromyalgia pain. However, conventional wisdom dictates that by the end of the
day our minds have been flooded with information gathered by our senses and
processed in our brains and bodies. Indeed, this is why we must sleep at night
so that we can process all we have absorbed and refresh our bodies. Thus, this
flood makes us the least clear at night.
Compare it to the clarity you have when you first wake each
day. What seems like a much more reasonable conclusion is that the body itself
is fatigued just from the activities of the day. Therefore, by the evening, it
takes far less to stress the muscles and create more inflammation. In fact,
while it may seem like an exaggeration, the muscles of fibromyalgia patients
might be mildly compared to rigor mortis wherein the muscles are always
contracted. Because fibro patients cannot usually relax their muscles.
Since fibromyalgia patients almost universally struggle with
good and restful sleep, here are some tips to facilitate better sleep, specifically for fibro patients:
·
Take a
soothing, warm bath in the evening (provided you have the energy to get in the
tub).
·
Bruch
your body with a loofah or long handled brush in the bath (your ability to do
this may vary from day to day given your level of pain).
·
Ease
painful tender points with a self-massage device, such as a tennis ball.
·
Practice
yoga or other stretching exercises to relax
·
Meditate
to calm intrusive thoughts and tension.
·
Sleep
in a dark room (consider an eye mask if necessary).
·
Keep
the room as quiet as possible (or use a white-noise machine or fan to drown out
subtle sounds).
·
Make
sure the room temperature is comfortable.
· Avoid
foods and beverages that contain caffeine, including teas, colas, and
chocolate.
· It
seems there may be a variety of reasons for fibromyalgia pain to increase at
night, but all of them point to muscles as the key player. Again, try a journal
that keeps up with food and basic activities for a month or so and see if you
find any common themes or triggers. Also try the list of tips here, knowing that
there are going to be days when even just one of the tips is an impossible
task. Simply do what you can and share your results with the rest of us!
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