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Menstrual Associated Sleep Disorder
In recent years the problems with sleep that women may
experience have been better appreciated. Women are among
the most chronically sleep deprived members of society,
with women from age 30-60 averaging just under 7 hours of
sleep per night during the week. This is contributed to
by a combination of factors, including the multiple roles
many women have as wage earner, homemaker and mother. In
addition of course, physiological differences due to changing
hormone levels add unique issues for women with what we
now recognize as an important effect on sleep quality.
Studies have shown that hormonal changes in the menstrual
cycle can and do interfere with sleep for an average 2-3
days per monthly cycle. The interference with sleep appears
due to a bloated feeling but clearly contributed to by other
factors. The most marked disturbance occurs during the first
few days of menstruation. An second time of disrupted sleep
occurs as progesterone levels fall towards the end of the
menstrual cycle. There may be difficulty falling asleep
in this time period. The premenstrual period, the last few
days before menstruation commences, is also associated with
poorer sleep with insomnia common but sometimes hypersomnia
or increased daytime sleepiness may also occur.
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