Quality of sleep: Is it better without the aid of medication?

Posted by 0616 @0616, Oct 29, 2020

Is the quality of a good night's sleep with the aide of medication as good as a good night's sleep WITHOUT the aide of a med?

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Sleep Health Support Group.

@0616, You will notice we changed the title of your discussion to include your question and help members who may be looking for an answer. There is some information on on addressing the issues of insomnia using cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) vs. medications on the Mayo Clinic - Insomnia - Diagnosis & treatment page under the Treatments heading here: https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/insomnia/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20355173

Have you seen a sleep medicine doctor or done a sleep study?

REPLY

Yes I have done the sleep study and am using a CPAP machine with great success albeit somewhat erratic wrt events. I do not suffer from insomnia and would rather not be included in that discussion. Thank you for your interest.

REPLY

@rfries here are other past discussions that are similar to the one you started where you may find some helpful information on non-medication ways to improve sleep quality.

- Not sleeping through the night. Looking for non medicated remedies: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/just-dropping-by/
- Sleep Hygiene: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/sleep-hygine/
- Natural sleep aids.: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/natural-sleep-aids/
- Weighted blankets to improve sleep quality: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/weighted-blankets-to-improve-sleep-quality/

I've been using a CPAP for about 2 years now and struggled with erratic AHI numbers often during the first year. My sleep doctor wanted my goal to be 4 events or less an hour. I finally found a mask that works after trying 4 or 5 different ones and that seems to have helped me the most. Have you been able to identify anything that seems to be causing the higher numbers?

REPLY

My experience started years ago when I didn't sleep for 4 days in a row during a very depressive episode and body becomes dependent, no longer functions in sleep mode, plus I believe it affects memory and depression. I do not get tired and trying to taper off with 3 mg of Melatonin along with Indica a form of medical marijuana. Please be aware that high doses of Melatonin caused me to have vivid nightmares. Good luck.

REPLY
@marjou

My experience started years ago when I didn't sleep for 4 days in a row during a very depressive episode and body becomes dependent, no longer functions in sleep mode, plus I believe it affects memory and depression. I do not get tired and trying to taper off with 3 mg of Melatonin along with Indica a form of medical marijuana. Please be aware that high doses of Melatonin caused me to have vivid nightmares. Good luck.

Jump to this post

@marjou I have always heard that high doses of melatonin tend to cause nightmares. When I take it, I never take more than 3mg for that reason.
JK

REPLY

I use zopiclone medication. Is this a safe drug

REPLY
@johnbishop

@0616, You will notice we changed the title of your discussion to include your question and help members who may be looking for an answer. There is some information on on addressing the issues of insomnia using cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) vs. medications on the Mayo Clinic - Insomnia - Diagnosis & treatment page under the Treatments heading here: https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/insomnia/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20355173

Have you seen a sleep medicine doctor or done a sleep study?

Jump to this post

Yes, He prescribed Zopiclone for past three years.Whats your thoughts

REPLY
@grp4546

I use zopiclone medication. Is this a safe drug

Jump to this post

Hello @grp4546, Welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. You mentioned in a following post that you were prescribed Zopiclone for the past 3 years and are wondering if it's safe to take the drug. I've read that you should not just stop taking the drug all of a sudden. Here's some information on the side effects from NHS - https://www.nhs.uk/medicines/zopiclone/.

Have you discussed your concerns with your doctor or pharmacist?

REPLY

I suppose it depends on the nature of the sleep disturbance. I've dealt with Restless Leg Syndrome and the accompanying Organic Leg Movement during sleep for nearly 40 years. RLS delays sleep onset, and OLMDS results in hundreds of micro-awakenings; resulting in failure to reach the rejuvenation level of sleep, and thus, fragmentation. After trying 27 medications and remedies, I saw Dr. Ehrinberg (who was, at the time, the Chairman of the Restless Leg Foundation) at Tuft's New England in Boston. Given the lack of efficacy of the medications most often prescribed for the disorder, he recommended the opioid hydrocodone (this was in 1988). By 2002 I and my wife were desperate for a solution, and I opted to try this approach (despite my fear of sidelong looks from pharmacists, and all that implies). The dosage that my physician and I ultimately discovered effective/optimal, was 30mg of hydrocodone before bed. Literally, overnight it was as though the disorder had never existed. within 4 years, any euphoria faded, and the medication simply worked. In 2014, due to CMS guidelines on insurance reimbursement for physicians that prescribed opioids, and numerous red flags the physician had to explain, and reports he had to generate, he discontinued the treatment. The RLS/OLMDS returned. To date, the only sleep disorder Medical Centers that continue to push back against the CMS and continue to recommend the opioid treatment, are Mayo, Tuft's New England, and Mass General. In the past six months, the CMS altered it's wording to say this was only a recommendation and not a guideline, but the damage had been done. Physicians are now fearful of doing what is best for the patient. Granted, there may be an opioid epidemic in this nation, but the CMS' blanket approach has altered the narrative for those who do need this treatment. It would be unkind and unethical to say, "let natural selection fix the problem by weeding out the abusers," but surely a compromise could be negotiated. I would think the CMS, of all organizations, would know that in medicine there are no absolutes, and no two patients respond the same way. Surely Hippocrates would hesitate to write his famous oath if he could only have seen the future of medicine. When reimbursement trumps what is best for the patient, I think the meme' would be, "there is a glitch in the Matrix."

REPLY
@davidlyle7

I suppose it depends on the nature of the sleep disturbance. I've dealt with Restless Leg Syndrome and the accompanying Organic Leg Movement during sleep for nearly 40 years. RLS delays sleep onset, and OLMDS results in hundreds of micro-awakenings; resulting in failure to reach the rejuvenation level of sleep, and thus, fragmentation. After trying 27 medications and remedies, I saw Dr. Ehrinberg (who was, at the time, the Chairman of the Restless Leg Foundation) at Tuft's New England in Boston. Given the lack of efficacy of the medications most often prescribed for the disorder, he recommended the opioid hydrocodone (this was in 1988). By 2002 I and my wife were desperate for a solution, and I opted to try this approach (despite my fear of sidelong looks from pharmacists, and all that implies). The dosage that my physician and I ultimately discovered effective/optimal, was 30mg of hydrocodone before bed. Literally, overnight it was as though the disorder had never existed. within 4 years, any euphoria faded, and the medication simply worked. In 2014, due to CMS guidelines on insurance reimbursement for physicians that prescribed opioids, and numerous red flags the physician had to explain, and reports he had to generate, he discontinued the treatment. The RLS/OLMDS returned. To date, the only sleep disorder Medical Centers that continue to push back against the CMS and continue to recommend the opioid treatment, are Mayo, Tuft's New England, and Mass General. In the past six months, the CMS altered it's wording to say this was only a recommendation and not a guideline, but the damage had been done. Physicians are now fearful of doing what is best for the patient. Granted, there may be an opioid epidemic in this nation, but the CMS' blanket approach has altered the narrative for those who do need this treatment. It would be unkind and unethical to say, "let natural selection fix the problem by weeding out the abusers," but surely a compromise could be negotiated. I would think the CMS, of all organizations, would know that in medicine there are no absolutes, and no two patients respond the same way. Surely Hippocrates would hesitate to write his famous oath if he could only have seen the future of medicine. When reimbursement trumps what is best for the patient, I think the meme' would be, "there is a glitch in the Matrix."

Jump to this post

Hello David @davidlyle7, Thanks for sharing your experience and knowledge about Restless Leg Syndrome and Organic Leg Movement. There are a couple of other discussions that you may find interesting and like reading the experience of other members and sharing your experience.

- Restless Leg Syndrome (RLS) and Opioids: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/rls-and-opioids/
- Restless leg symdrome affecting my sleep: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/restless-leg-symdrome/

I see that you shared your story with RLS/OLMDS in the Restless Leg Syndrome discussion here in case other members missed it. I thought it might really be helpful for some - https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/restless-leg-syndrome-2a74e5/?pg=15#comment-403710

How are you doing now?

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.