Do you feel irritable or short-tempered around your family, children, and loved ones? Do you have trouble performing at school at work? Have you lost your drive to spend time with friends? Have you been struggling with erectile dysfunction (for men) and/or reduced sex drive? Do small tasks feel like a big deal? If these sound familiar, then the information below may be helpful in assisting you while you navigate what's wrong.
Each of the above issues can be caused by chronic fatigue which can be hard to identify in real life. Especially if you are getting 8 hours of sleep, you might not identify sleep as the underlying cause. There are a number of sleep conditions where your clock might tell you that you received 8 hours of sleep, but your body can't tell.
In this article we will focus on common sleep conditions that give the illusion that you are receiving a full night's rest when in actuality you aren't - this is an excellent place to start evaluating causes of your fatigue.
One of the more common reasons you are tired all the time, even after 8 hours of sleep, is that you have a sleep disorder. Sleep disorders are conditions that prevent you from getting quality sleep. Here are a few sleep disorders that would give you the illusion of sleeping throughout the night, but actually don’t provide quality sleep.
Sleep apnea is a sleep disorder and medical condition that causes you to repeatedly stop breathing constantly throughout the night, anywhere for 40 to over 100 times per night.
When you stop breathing, you momentarily wake up to begin breathing again (though you won’t remember waking). Therefore, you might sleep from 9pm to 7am and steel feel like you barely slept – because you really didn’t! It causes severe sleep deprivation because you are constantly being rouses, thereby preventing any restful sleep from happening.
Here are common symptoms:
Parasomnias are disruptive sleep disorders that interfere with your circadian rhythm, and may impact sleep quality without your awareness of it. You might compare this to, say, insomnia where you are acutely aware of your lack of sleep
Common parasomnias include:
Sleep deprivation isn’t always the product of a sleeping disorder. Your sleep quality might also be impacted by:
So, in conclusion, remember that just because you're in bed for the right amount of time doesn't mean that you're actually getting quality sleep.
If you live in Alaska and are dealing with chronic fatigue, it may be a sleep problem. Please take this free online sleep test to get in touch: