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Thread : Sleeping Problems on Re-established Stimulant Treatment  
1 Nov 2010 @ 8:21 PM
Rekka_Yoruhana Join Date: Sat 25th Apr 2009
Threads: 5 Posts: 20
Sleeping Problems on Re-established Stimulant Treatment

So a little backstory here, but I'll try to keep it short so please keep reading and let me know if this sounds at all familiar!

I started taking Aderall XR in Spring/Summer of 2007 (about 3 months before the end of my senior year of high school), switched to the generic form (mixed amphetamine salts, 10 mg twice daily) soon after. I took that regimen until somewhere around February-April 2010. I stopped taking my medication (without notifying my doctor, yeah I know it was a stupid move but doctor visits are a minimum of $160 each w/o insurance), mostly to see if some of the things I was feeling (shakiness and irritability at work) were caused by the medication or something.

Anyway, shakiness seemed to be caused only partially by the medication and mostly because of my diet at the time (no where near enough protein for breakfast), and the irritability at work may have been just stress because of family problems.

So I just started taking the same medication regimen on Saturday, and I started noticing some things. I took one pill on Saturday around 9 am before leaving to spend the weekend at a relative's house. Didn't take the second dose that day, had a difficult time falling asleep but eventually did and stayed asleep for at least five hours. On Sunday I took the first dose about the same time, then the second dose around 3 pm, and couldn't get to sleep at all last night. Tossed and turned, drifted off a few times only to drift back awake a few minutes later, etc. Longest I slept in one go was about 30 minutes.

Got back home today, was supposed to go to work at 3 but had to call in because I basically haven't slept more than an hour or two in over 24 hours. Took my first dose anyway around 8 am before leaving, tried to take a nap once I got home and failed (around 12 pm), took second dose anyway around 4 pm. Also noticing my heart rate feels like it's up a lot.

So what I want to know, since my first time taking this medication regimen was so long ago I can't remember what it felt like, is this part of a normal adjustment period? Has anyone else had this issue after taking a certain medication, stopping for a while, then starting it again? I'm scheduled to talk to my doctor again after I get through this month's supply, but I would like to avoid extra appointments if I can find the information for free elsewhere.

Also possibly useful information: my metabolism seemed to take a nosedive when I first stopped taking the medication back in early spring (went from 110 lbs at 5' tall without much effort to 150 lbs within about four months), possibly made worse by taking standard birth control pills for two months. Used to be my first dose would wear off within about 5-6 hours instead of the standard 8-10 hours, so maybe my metabolism is slow enough that I should space it out more now? Also, haven't had anything with caffeine since one bottle of cane sugar Coca-Cola on Saturday night, if that helps.

Any and all advice would be very helpful! Thank you anyone who has managed to read this far!

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2 Nov 2010 @ 10:29 AM Reply # 1
ADDitudeWebEditor Join Date: Fri 22nd Jan 2010
Threads: 2 Posts: 6
Sorry for your ADHD-related sleep problems

Hi,

The following information comes from Dr. William Dodson's local:"/adhd/article/757.html:"ADHD Sleep Problems: Causes and Tips to Rest Better Tonight!" it will hopefully be helpful to you:

Sleep disturbances have been incorrectly attributed to the stimulant-class medications that are often the first to be used to treat ADHD. The four most common sleep disturbances associated with ADHD are:

1. Initiation Insomnia About three-fourths of all adults with ADHD report inability to "shut off my mind so I can fall asleep at night." Many describe themselves as "night owls" who get a burst of energy when the sun goes down. Others report that they feel tired throughout the day, but as soon as the head hits the pillow, the mind clicks on. Their thoughts jump or bounce from one worry to another. Unfortunately, many of these adults describe their thoughts as "racing," prompting a misdiagnosis of bipolar mood disorder, when this is nothing more than the mental restlessness of ADHD.

Prior to puberty, 10 to 15 percent of children with ADHD have trouble getting to sleep. This is twice the rate found in children and adolescents who do not have ADHD. This number dramatically increases with age: 50 percent of children with ADHD have difficulty falling asleep almost every night by age 12 ½ by age 30, more than 70 percent of adults with ADHD report that they spend more than one hour trying to fall asleep at night.

2. Restless Sleep When individuals with ADHD finally fall asleep, their sleep is restless. They toss and turn. They awaken at any noise in the house. They are so fitful that bed partners often choose to sleep in another bed. They often awake to find the bed torn apart and covers kicked onto the floor. Sleep is not refreshing and they awaken as tired as when they went to bed.

3. Difficulty Waking More than 80 percent of adults with ADHD in my practice report multiple awakenings until about 4 a.m. Then they fall into "the sleep of the dead," from which they have extreme difficulty rousing themselves.

They sleep through two or three alarms, as well as the attempts of family members to get them out of bed. ADHD sleepers are commonly irritable, even combative, when roused before they are ready. Many of them say they are not fully alert until noon.

4. Intrusive Sleep Paul Wender, M.D., a 30-year veteran ADHD researcher, relates ADHD to interest-based performance. As long as persons with ADHD were interested in or challenged by what they were doing, they did not demonstrate symptoms of the disorder. (This phenomenon is called hyperfocus by some, and is often considered to be an ADHD pattern.) If, on the other hand, an individual with ADHD loses interest in an activity, his nervous system disengages, in search of something more interesting. Sometimes this disengagement is so abrupt as to induce sudden extreme drowsiness, even to the point of falling asleep.

Marian Sigurdson, Ph.D., an expert on electroencephalography (EEG) findings in ADHD, reports that brain wave tracings at this time show a sudden intrusion of theta waves into the alpha and beta rhythms of alertness. We all have seen "theta wave intrusion," in the student in the back of the classroom who suddenly crashes to the floor, having "fallen asleep." This was probably someone with ADHD who was losing consciousness due to boredom rather than falling asleep. This syndrome is life-threatening if it occurs while driving, and it is often induced by long-distance driving on straight, monotonous roads. Often this condition is misdiagnosed as "EEG negative narcolepsy." The extent of incidence of intrusive "sleep" is not known, because it occurs only under certain conditions that are hard to reproduce in a laboratory.

Here are some additional helpful articles on sleep issues:

7 Solutions to Sleep Problems

ADHD Sleep Resources

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Last edited by ADDitudeWebEditor : 2 Nov 2010 @ 10:30 AM. Reason: link issue
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