Are you not sleeping as well as you used to after your head injury? You're not alone. Disruptions in our sleep cycles can be caused by a host of things including the direct trauma inflicted on the "sleep" areas of our brains, changes in melatonin levels or brain hormones, and regulators. After talking with many TBI survivors, I quickly learned I wasn't the only one having issues with my sleep cycles. Others described that since their head injury, they've had one or more issues:
Doctors and researchers suggest that sleep is crucial for TBI recovery and if survivors aren't getting enough sleep it can actually make TBI symptoms worse... Sound familiar? Some symptoms that worsen with lack of sleep include bain fatigue, confusion, symptoms of depression and anxiety, mood swings; memory loss, and worsening physical pain.
The "best" bandaids out there are marketed as sleep aids and medications. Ironically, many sleep medications, including over-the-counter drugs can make TBIs worse. In my own personal experience, I witnessed this first hand and soon turned to an alternative approach to really help rest my sleep cycle. I began redefining what "good sleep hygiene" was for me.
Here's what Good Sleep Hygiene looks like for me:
Routine:
The Bedroom:
Physical Health:
This is not a practice that improves overnight! It may take weeks or months for the human body to adjust to life after an accident let alone a closed head injury and the trauma that it brings, but it is a crucial practice to be mindful of as you go throughout your recovery!