OTC sleep med

General Discussion on any topic relating to CPAP and/or Sleep Apnea.
jonquiljo
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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by jonquiljo » Thu Mar 03, 2011 12:59 am

robysue wrote:---whether they are directly related to problems created by starting xCPAP therapy (such as those Rooster lists: suboptimal CPAP therapy; discomfort from CPAP; aerophagia or gastric insufflation;) or whether they are related to other medical problems problems (such as those Rooser lists: LPRD; GERD; anxiety; depression among others). Without working on improving the sleep hygiene and taking care of the other root causes of the insomnia, the sleeping pills may mask the insomnia, but the fundamental problem triggering the insomnia remains and may (and probably will) raise its head at a future time---particularly if the person taking the sleeping pills eventually does decide they no longer want to take them on a regular basis.

Well this goes way beyond the issue of XPAP. You can sometimes stare an insomnia problem until you turn blue, but the fact is that many are never solved. So you either live with it (usually unacceptable), or you deal with it though chemistry. Everything we do medically to ourselves is about choices - physicians are really the means, not the cure. We make lots of choices that are not totally tested. Sometimes, a sleep med is warranted - unless you want to spend 20 years talking to a shrink who knows very little about what you are talking about. Anxiety disorders suck and often cause insomnia. In the almost 60 years I have been around, I have seen very little to help that. I've seen a lot of meds come out to pretend to do that, but anxiety is one of our least curable diseases - in any form.

That said, it is not a good idea either to get habituated to a benzodiazepine med like Valium or Halcion unless you know what you are getting into. Lots of MD's Rx Klonopin for some stupid reason. Not only do you get seriously addicted, but the benefits make you tired all day long! So read up, and make your own decisions. I think there are lots of people with insomnia who just happen to use XPAP. They think the insomnia is from the XPAP therapy. Most of the time (most, not all) it is not and likely they have had problems with insomnia for years.

To the OP - if you want an OTC med, understand that there are very little options out there. Most OTC sleep meds are for something else that just make you tired. It's no different than a shot of bourbon to go to sleep. At least some sleep meds (Rx only) are designed for sleep But they have their problems as well. Be careful.

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robysue
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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by robysue » Thu Mar 03, 2011 9:13 am

jonquiljo wrote:
robysue wrote:---whether they are directly related to problems created by starting xCPAP therapy (such as those Rooster lists: suboptimal CPAP therapy; discomfort from CPAP; aerophagia or gastric insufflation;) or whether they are related to other medical problems problems (such as those Rooser lists: LPRD; GERD; anxiety; depression among others). Without working on improving the sleep hygiene and taking care of the other root causes of the insomnia, the sleeping pills may mask the insomnia, but the fundamental problem triggering the insomnia remains and may (and probably will) raise its head at a future time---particularly if the person taking the sleeping pills eventually does decide they no longer want to take them on a regular basis.

Well this goes way beyond the issue of XPAP. You can sometimes stare an insomnia problem until you turn blue, but the fact is that many are never solved. So you either live with it (usually unacceptable), or you deal with it though chemistry.
Or you do some hard work with CBT to literally re-teach your body how to sleep through the night.

Now, I won't pretend that CBT is easy---since it is not. And I won't claim that CBT is the way to solve long-term severe insomnia for everybody suffering from insomnia. But for *many* folks with insomnia problems that are NOT rooted in a medical condition, CBT is potentially a better long-term solution than meds. Some links to refereed scholarly papers to consider:

Effect of cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia on sleep architecture and sleep EEG power spectra in psychophysiological insomnia.
pdf of the above link

Sleep EEG Predictors and Correlates of the Response to Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia

pdf of Sleep EEG Power Spectra, Insomnia, and Chronic Use of Benzodiazepines

Psychophysiological insomnia: the behavioural model and a neurocognitive perspective.

A psychophysiological study of insomnia.

Note: Some of these papers support the use of CBT and others support the use of drugs in the treatment of insomnia. Both approaches have their strengths and weaknesses in treating insomnia that is NOT caused by other conditions.
Everything we do medically to ourselves is about choices - physicians are really the means, not the cure. We make lots of choices that are not totally tested. Sometimes, a sleep med is warranted - unless you want to spend 20 years talking to a shrink who knows very little about what you are talking about. Anxiety disorders suck and often cause insomnia. In the almost 60 years I have been around, I have seen very little to help that. I've seen a lot of meds come out to pretend to do that, but anxiety is one of our least curable diseases - in any form.
CBT is a very useful tool in fighting both insomnia and anxiety. Will it work for everybody? No. But if nothing else works OR if a person suffering from one or both of these conditions really does NOT want to take medication, then CBT is well worth considering: Provided the person is willing to commit to doing the serious work in changing the behavior patterns that aggravate the condition AND is willing to settle for a "solution" that is NOT quick.
That said, it is not a good idea either to get habituated to a benzodiazepine med like Valium or Halcion unless you know what you are getting into. Lots of MD's Rx Klonopin for some stupid reason. Not only do you get seriously addicted, but the benefits make you tired all day long! So read up, and make your own decisions.
This is exactly why I so strongly feel that if a person decides that sleeping pills are the right choice for them, that it is critical that they have a long chat with the prescribing doctor: About which medicine will be prescribed and why. About potential side affects. About the potential for addiction or even more run of the mill "dependence" that falls short of true addiction. About how the medicine should be taken (every night? only occaisonally?), how long the medicine should be used, and how the weaning off the medicine will be done if/when it is time to eliminate the medicine. All these issues CAN be dealt with and SHOULD be dealt with once you decide that taking sleeping pills is the right choice for you.
I think there are lots of people with insomnia who just happen to use XPAP. They think the insomnia is from the XPAP therapy. Most of the time (most, not all) it is not and likely they have had problems with insomnia for years.
You are right here for the most part. However, I think you underestimate the ability of starting xPAP therapy to severely AGGRAVATE an existing insomnia problem. As someone who has had problems with insomnia off and on for years (and managed them quite nicely through good sleep hygiene), I have no doubts about three things considering my current bout of insomnia:
  • 1) My past history of insomnia is a SIGNIFICANT factor in my developing the most severe case of insomnia that I've ever dealt with since starting xPAP. And my sleep doctor completely ignored this history when I started xPAP and simply told me, "You'll have no problems adjusting to CPAP and you'll feel much better in two or three weeks." NOT!

    2) The sensory overload, aerophagia, and air-in-eyes-through-tear ducts problems that became critically by Night 3 are the immediate triggers of this bout of insomnia. Even as late as this past summer (pre-CPAP), my insomnia had not been a serious problem for the last two or three years----it was well under control through my normal decent, but not excellent good sleep hygiene. I'd have some stretches of "bad" nights maybe two or three times a month and seldom more than two or three nights in a row. But stress and sensory overload have ALWAYS been triggers of my serious bouts of insomnia, and it's no surprise that the stress and sensory overload of starting CPAP triggered yet another bout of insomnia.

    3) Once the insomnia started, it started to feed on many non-CPAP things going on in my life. The not-so-funny thing about insomnia is that it can feed on many and varied sources of stress, anxiety, and worries. Significantly, a major source of insomnia is insomnia itself---the nightly worrying about the current level of insomnia quite frequently makes the insomnia worse. It's a vicious cycle. And in my case CBT is helping me break that cycle.

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jonquiljo
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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by jonquiljo » Thu Mar 03, 2011 2:45 pm

robysue wrote:Or you do some hard work with CBT to literally re-teach your body how to sleep through the night.

CBT is hit and miss depending on who you go to see to work with. It's like anything, some are better than others. I have seen people who have practiced CBT since the early 80's and they have had mixed results. The problem is that it generally seems to work for one specific problem - if it does work - not overall anxiety disorders.
robysue wrote:Some links to refereed scholarly papers to consider:
Peer review is a tricky thing to consider - especially when it comes to anything medical. I used to do this kind of stuff for a living (pure science, though) so I am terribly wary of what people can publish. Statistics is an easy way of making most anything fit your model - it becomes more of a popularity contest (i.e. - your friends who like you get you published). Usually the best parts are the discussions at the end, if you take them in the light that they are the author's "opinion".

Then it is best to lean CBT from someone who can teach it to you and adapt it to your life in whatever way you want. That takes years but can be worthwhile. But going to a shrink sometimes for 5, 10, 15, even 20 years can be a bigger habit than sleeping pills. If you are as screwed up as I am (and many tend to be) - you lean a technique and spend the rest of your life using it - kind of like using dental floss. It takes a long time to see results and is one in a bag of many things to work with.
robysue wrote: However, I think you underestimate the ability of starting xPAP therapy to severely AGGRAVATE an existing insomnia problem.

No, not at all. Many people acclimate to XPAP readily, but some do not. Of those there are a percentage that are not adapting because the machine is not optimally set for them. Then, there are those who have true insomnia because they are hooked up to this foreign object blowing air into them. If it freaks you out - then CBT is a good candidate for this problem. Since most Dr's tend not to think about problems at any distance from their own discipline - many ignore the insomnia problem. It's the "not invented here" syndrome. I guess they need CBT to lean to open their minds a bit!

But there are lots of people who just have insomnia. Many whom I have talked to are simply afraid of not sleeping - and so the cycle continues. Its one big anxiety disorder - or a part of a bigger anxiety problem. That's where people get tricky. You cant take a Type-A person and easily convert then into a Type-B. Sometimes you have to deal with a deck that is not full. I certainly do and have limped by with the best of all worlds. I guess what I am saying is that anxiety problems are complex and sometimes you can take 20 years and just get yourself so far. It's part of the human condition. Sounds like you are not a stress case of anxiety - so it's is probably easier for you.
robysue wrote:This is exactly why I so strongly feel that if a person decides that sleeping pills are the right choice for them, that it is critical that they have a long chat with the prescribing doctor: About which medicine will be prescribed and why. About potential side affects. About the potential for addiction or even more run of the mill "dependence" that falls short of true addiction.

If you can find a Dr that knows what he or she is talking about - just don't totally take their word for it. I have seen so many people rely on Dr's for this kind of information just to end up on some suboptimal medicine (or worse) to end up on something that is severely addictive. That is what I meant about Klonopin being prescribed commonly. Lots of Dr.'s think that this is a relatively "un-abusable" benzodiazepine - and therefore won't be a problem. Well, it may not be easily abused - but gets you to sleep with the side effects of being tired all day long - mainly because it's half life is way too long. And it is a benzodiazepine nevertheless, which means that getting off it is a pain in the butt. It is just as hard to get off of as an addictive one. So, if you're going to get addicted at all - then best take something that works well. Now Ambien, etc are much less addictive (but still addictive regardless). But they really work. When behavioral training isn't enough - you sometimes need a helper. This is the "bag of many tricks" approach I alluded to before.

The amazing thing is that sometimes just knowing you have an Ambien to take is enough to keep you calm enough to avoid insomnia. I have known lots of people in which that was true.

I think we differ only in that insomnia is more of a treatable problem when it is someone with relatively few anxiety problems. In someone like me, with a plethora of neuroses, it takes a more varied approach, as no single thing will work. And if I am correct, severely neurotic and anxious people like me are in the majority too!

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by avi123 » Thu Mar 03, 2011 2:53 pm

scrapper wrote:Avi123's last post and robysue's express two different viewpoints on the same subject.

What is right for one person, isn't necessary right for the next person........

There's no one right answer that you need to provide more research on tomorrow avi123.

Thanks scrapperer!

I just tried to reply to bob (cortez) about the question on OTC sleeping pills that there are none (probably except for Melatonin for some) that could compete with
pharmaceutical developed sleeping aids (not OTC).

BTW, until four month ago just before I started CPAPING I never had INSOMNIA as defined here:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001808/

But over the years I did take all kinds of Rx, some of them habit forming such as Paxil, Zolpidem (generic Ambien), etc.

As to antibiotics , robysue, you're not correct that always they are taken for short time. I myself for example, take antibiotic daily b/c of the Staph infection that I contracted five years ago during a hip replacement. I'll take it prophylactically the rest of my life.

Four month ago I have run into OSA attack which I probably had hidden for years. No sleeping pills helped, and I started to loose weight unintentionally. My sleep was VERY FRAGMENTED. You can call it INSOMNIA but the Neurologists did not use that term.

Only CPAP helped. But for getting used to putting the mask on I had to increased the dose of Ambien. The Ambien with its short half life was ideal b/c I needed it only for falling a sleep. It did put me to sleep within 15 min. Now, 4 months later I decided to withdraw from the Ambien. By starting to take Xanax I managed to cut the Ambien by half (from 10 mg to 5 mgr).

But still I could not stop taking the Ambien completely. So this weekend, I'll start taking 300 mg of Gabapentin, 2 hours before sleep (in addition to 0.5 mg of Xanax twice daily) and check if I could fall asleep with the CPAP within one hour without taking the Ambien.

Please wish me luck.

Robysue, there are folks who refuse taking any medications even for surgeries, pain killers for cancer, etc., so what, do I need to follow?

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by M.D.Hosehead » Thu Mar 03, 2011 4:32 pm

I'm not entering the discussion of whether the use of pharmacologic sleep aids is good or bad. Obviously, opinions vary.

However, I want to address a statement by Jonquilo that is not only flat wrong, but potentially dangerous. Jonquilo wrote:
Most OTC sleep meds are for something else that just make you tired. It's no different than a shot of bourbon to go to sleep.
Using alcohol in an attempt to treat insomnia is a bad idea because:

1. alcohol is addictive; using it as a sleep med risks dependency.
2. alcohol can be responsible for gastritis, ulcers, liver disease, pancreatitis, even in a person who isn't "alcoholic."
3. alcohol produces withdrawal symptoms that can be worse than benzodiazepines-- for example, benzodiazepine withdrawal doesn't cause DT's.
4. alcohol has a short half life (a few hours); you can be in alcohol withdrawal before the night is over.
5. the "sleep: produced by alcohol is not true sleep, and lacks normal sleep architecture.

Diphenhydramine, the only sleep med available OTC, is a sedating antihistamine, has none of the above characteristics, and is far safer than alcohol. It can cause varying degrees of AM sedation, which effect is usually controllable by dose reduction.

Diphenhydramine BTW is the subject of the OP's query.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by robysue » Thu Mar 03, 2011 11:35 pm

Avi123,

You ask: "Robysue, there are folks who refuse taking any medications even for surgeries, pain killers for cancer, etc., so what, do I need to follow? "

You have every right to decide, with the advice and knowledge of your doctors, about which medical approaches are best for you and whether taking certain medications are the right approach for you. You most certainly don't have to follow anybody---let alone me and my own decisions about medication. As I said in my post: It seems to me that you've made a careful, thoughtful, and informed decision regarding sleeping medication (as well as the other meds you are taking). Taking the sleeping pills works for you, and that's good. And I'm glad they work for you. And I sincerely hope they continue to work for you for as long as you are comfortable taking them.

But just because taking medication works for you, does not mean it will work or be acceptable to others. For me, I have a rather conservative approach to medications and I am reluctant to take prescription medication if there are other medically sound approaches to try first. It's what I am comfortable with for me. And my PCP and the PA in my sleep doctor's office both respect my preference to try non-drug solutions first where possible. And that's why I'm grateful that the PA been willing to work with me on the CBT approach to dealing with my insomnia. [And yes, my problems with sleep continuity have been formally and officially labeled as insomnia---including in the doctor's dictated notes on one of my PSGs.]

And it's not that I'm always opposed to taking prescription medication: I'm currently taking a prophylactic med (Lamictal) for migraines. I'm deeply conflicted about taking this medication---it's serious stuff that is usually prescribed for the treatment of epilepsy and has potentially serious side effects. But my migraines have morphed into causing severe, frequent vertigo spells that are capable of severely interfering with my daily life, and in light of that, I recognize the need to use a chemical approach to managing them at least for the time being. And the switch to Lamictral was warrented because I simply could not tolerate the side effects of topiramate. But had my migraines not morphed into the vertigo spells, I would have continued to treat my migraine headaches themselves with a variety of non-chemical coping strategies. Because that was the right choice for me before the vertigo started---since the headaches themselves are mild enough for me to live with.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by jonquiljo » Fri Mar 04, 2011 12:26 am

M.D.Hosehead wrote: Diphenhydramine, the only sleep med available OTC, is a sedating antihistamine, has none of the above characteristics, and is far safer than alcohol. It can cause varying degrees of AM sedation, which effect is usually controllable by dose reduction.
Not true. Doxylamine Succinate is used in Unisom (and generics). It's what used to be in "Ny-Quil" - I'm not sure what they use now. I was making a comparison, not advocating alcohol to go to sleep! Frankly, I wouldn't know as I have not had a drink of alcohol in about 25 years - it makes me ill.

The concept of taking medicine for its side effect is what I was trying to make a point about - that is not a good practice at all. In the Rx arena, Dr's give Trazodone, Seroquel, Elavil, you name it - antipsychotic medications (generally) to help people to sleep. If you aren't psychotic or if you don't need the primary effects of these drugs - then why take them to sleep? Those side effect make people sometimes feel terrible for a long time!

Avi123: In your case, I think it's an example of taking things too far. Ambien to sleep is fine for a while, but then the use of Xanax to get off the Ambien does not make sense. They are two different classes of drug. Now, to take Neurontin (Gabapentin) is adding a 3rd drug to the mix that will not help you withdraw from Xanax or Ambien directly. That's when it helps to know what you are getting into when you start these things.

Obviously a Dr rx'd these drugs but he/she is not doing you any favors bouncing you from one drug to another. Frankly, IMO, they don't know what they are doing. If Ambien was too short acting, there is Ambien CR which is longer acting. Now they put you on Neurontin basically to stop all the "bad reputation" meds - more for their comfort level, not yours. They should be trying to taper you off directly. The problem is that most of them don't care enough or have the time to think about it correctly.

So, MD. Hosehead - I don't advocate stupid things to get to sleep - certainly not alcohol. I advocate the use of Rx sleeping meds if you know what you are getting into. What I see a lot of here is people getting into these meds led by Drs that do not think about what they are getting the patient into. That worries me. Benzodiazepine withdrawal is as bad (if not worse) than withdrawing from narcotics. It's a high price to pay to get to sleep. Ambien is a lot less horrific, but then again - the patient needs to know. Finally, OTC meds are really sedating drugs that have other effects (and are originally intended for another purpose) and I don't believe that should be done either. Some people feel like garbage for a couple of days after taking diphenhydramine or doxylamine succinate. All that to sleep? So take a little Ambien if you want - but be careful about what lies next. And, of course, alcohol is about the worst medicine around, which is why too many people use it for the wrong reason.

And, if you are crazy like me and have anxiety disorders - then talk with lots of Dr's until you figure the best way to deal with it. Chances are you can modify it by behavior changes, but it will never go away - not in our lifetimes.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by robysue » Fri Mar 04, 2011 1:15 am

jonquiljo wrote:
robysue wrote:Or you do some hard work with CBT to literally re-teach your body how to sleep through the night.

CBT is hit and miss depending on who you go to see to work with.
Lots of things in life are hit or miss. Including how well sleeping pills will work for long-term management of insomnia. Some people will have no problems taking them---possibly for years. But for others, the pills seem to quit working after a while (due to increased tolerance) and they then find themselves on a merry-go-round of meds that never fully address why they can't sleep as well as they'd like: I have a friend at work who's been taking some kind of prescription sleeping pill for 10 years for her chronic insomnia. She tells me that while she can't fall asleep without it, she still wakes up numerous times at night and cannot get back to sleep, and sometimes lies in bed not sleeping for hours. And she has talked to her doctor about this. At this point, she's ready to give up on the sleeping pills since they don't seem to be helping her sleep anymore, but according to the doctor, she will have to carefully wean herself off of them carefully and slowly. And expect the insomnia to get worse before it gets better.
robysue wrote:Some links to refereed scholarly papers to consider:
Peer review is a tricky thing to consider - especially when it comes to anything medical. I used to do this kind of stuff for a living (pure science, though) so I am terribly wary of what people can publish. Statistics is an easy way of making most anything fit your model - it becomes more of a popularity contest (i.e. - your friends who like you get you published). Usually the best parts are the discussions at the end, if you take them in the light that they are the author's "opinion".
As an academic I know all about what you're talking about. Still, peer reviewed articles carry more weight that non-peer reviewed stuff in my humble opinion. As for the misuse of statistics, you are preaching to the choir---I am a mathematician.
Then it is best to lean CBT from someone who can teach it to you and adapt it to your life in whatever way you want. That takes years but can be worthwhile. But going to a shrink sometimes for 5, 10, 15, even 20 years can be a bigger habit than sleeping pills.
I really think you are misrepresenting CBT in its simplest forms---as in its use for managing insomnia. There's no reason to expect CBT (for insomnia) to last for 5 to 20 years and there's no need for it to require going to a shrink: I'm working with the PA in my sleep doctor's office as my "coach" for the CBT. We both expect that it will take a few more months before the insomnia is really down to a level that I can comfortably manage long term.

At its most basic level, CBT is about identifying and changing behaviors that aggravate the problem, and replacing them with behaviors that tend to alleviate the problem. It's not about analyzing why the problem exists or why you are the way you are or why you developed the "bad" behavior patterns in the first place. It really is, at its most basic level, designed as problem solving: Here's a behavior pattern that's causing some trouble. Here's a way of learning how to substitute a better behavior pattern in its place.
If you are as screwed up as I am (and many tend to be) - you lean a technique and spend the rest of your life using it - kind of like using dental floss. It takes a long time to see results and is one in a bag of many things to work with.
Yes, CBT takes a long time to see results. And that is a major drawback for many, many people. And for anybody wanting a quick solution, CBT is NOT a good choice. But some people are willing to sacrifice a "quick" solution for one that will provide them with the tools to manage the problem for the rest of their lives. It's a highly personal decision to choose CBT for insomnia over sleeping pills. And it's not a decision to be made lightly: To really stand a chance of succeeding with CBT you have to have the patience and the commitment to do the hard work of changing your behavior. If you're not willing to do that, then CBT is NOT an appropriate way to treat the insomnia.
robysue wrote: However, I think you underestimate the ability of starting xPAP therapy to severely AGGRAVATE an existing insomnia problem.

No, not at all. Many people acclimate to XPAP readily, but some do not. Of those there are a percentage that are not adapting because the machine is not optimally set for them. Then, there are those who have true insomnia because they are hooked up to this foreign object blowing air into them. If it freaks you out - then CBT is a good candidate for this problem. Since most Dr's tend not to think about problems at any distance from their own discipline - many ignore the insomnia problem. It's the "not invented here" syndrome. I guess they need CBT to lean to open their minds a bit!
And how is insomnia "at a distance" from a sleep doctor's specialty? My own sleep doctor's website talks at length about insomnia and when to seek professional help and so on ... But, yep, he ignored my history of stress induced insomnia at my one and only meeting with him. Fortunately his PA is much better at seeing the connections between my long and difficult adjustment to xPAP therapy, my pre-CPAP history of insomnia, and my current bout of insomnia. And in making useful suggestions on how to tackle both the current insomnia and the adjustment to xPAP issues.

And for new CPAPers who never fought with insomnia before, but develop the problems you are talking about: I think most of them will likely recover their ability to sleep soundly once they get through the learning curve. For some of them a short course of sleeping pills will likely even be a useful tool. For others paying a bit more attention to their sleep hygiene and working to solve the issues that freak them out about CPAP may be all they need.
But there are lots of people who just have insomnia. Many whom I have talked to are simply afraid of not sleeping - and so the cycle continues. Its one big anxiety disorder - or a part of a bigger anxiety problem. That's where people get tricky. You cant take a Type-A person and easily convert then into a Type-B. Sometimes you have to deal with a deck that is not full. I certainly do and have limped by with the best of all worlds. I guess what I am saying is that anxiety problems are complex and sometimes you can take 20 years and just get yourself so far. It's part of the human condition. Sounds like you are not a stress case of anxiety - so it's is probably easier for you.
I'm much more a Type-A than Type-B when it comes to stress and how I handle it (or rather how I fail to handle it).

Now, it's true that stress and anxiety are not the same beast. My brother deals with both severe stress and severe anxiety at times. While I'm a rather anxious person in my own right, I will admit that the level of my anxiety seldom gets high enough to be a real problem. It sounds like your anxiety is as bad or worse than my brother's. And my heart goes out to you: Severe anxiety is a beast that is very resistant to effective medical treatment in many folks.

But not all chronic insomniacs are anxious in the sense of severe anxiety. Many of them are world class worriers (as I am) and many of them do spend too much time worrying about not sleeping (or being afraid of not sleeping). And you are right, that many of them worry/fear about their lack of sleep and that feeds the insmonia night after night. And appropriate CBT work can be critical in breaking that cycle---regardless of whether they decide to take sleeping pills or not. Giving up the clock is critical: As long as you can lie in bed and quantify exactly how long you've not been sleeping each night, it's hard to not worry about how much time you know you are awake. Though many insomniacs have a hard time believing it, simply putting the clock out of sight goes a long way in giving you the freedom to NOT worry about how little time you've been asleep. And the underlying reason for all the sleep hygiene rules is to make it easier to NOT worry about how little sleep you are getting while lying in bed.
robysue wrote:This is exactly why I so strongly feel that if a person decides that sleeping pills are the right choice for them, that it is critical that they have a long chat with the prescribing doctor: About which medicine will be prescribed and why. About potential side affects. About the potential for addiction or even more run of the mill "dependence" that falls short of true addiction.

If you can find a Dr that knows what he or she is talking about - just don't totally take their word for it. I have seen so many people rely on Dr's for this kind of information just to end up on some suboptimal medicine (or worse) to end up on something that is severely addictive. That is what I meant about Klonopin being prescribed commonly. Lots of Dr.'s think that this is a relatively "un-abusable" benzodiazepine - and therefore won't be a problem. Well, it may not be easily abused - but gets you to sleep with the side effects of being tired all day long - mainly because it's half life is way too long. And it is a benzodiazepine nevertheless, which means that getting off it is a pain in the butt. It is just as hard to get off of as an addictive one. So, if you're going to get addicted at all - then best take something that works well. Now Ambien, etc are much less addictive (but still addictive regardless). But they really work. When behavioral training isn't enough - you sometimes need a helper. This is the "bag of many tricks" approach I alluded to before.
I agree you need to not just take the doctor's word for it---research of your own is critical. And I also agree that sometimes you need a "helper' when the behavior training is not enough. But I'd also suggest it goes the other way too: Without at least a bit of the behavior training, the sleeping pills are less likely to be effective in the long run.

As far as Ambien working: It only worked "so-so" for me on the three nights I actually took it. (The nights were not in a row.) Yeah, it put me to sleep right away; but I still woke up for three or four long wakes in a six hour in-bed time frame. And I was groggy all day. And I had a scare with Ambien-induced taking my mask off and putting it back on (badly) without remembering a thing.

Sonata? Well the one time I took it, it still took me about 30 minutes to actually get to sleep. And again, I still woke up in the night for several long periods of time. Of course I was stressed out big time that night from having not slept much the night before.
I think we differ only in that insomnia is more of a treatable problem when it is someone with relatively few anxiety problems. In someone like me, with a plethora of neuroses, it takes a more varied approach, as no single thing will work. And if I am correct, severely neurotic and anxious people like me are in the majority too!
I'd say that none of the insomniacs that I personally know are "severely neurotic and anxious", and I know a fair number of insomniacs---most of my relatives on my mother's side of the family have intermittent problems with moderate to severe insomnia.

But I don't think we're as far apart as you think we are on treating insomnia. I think that the particular approach to treating insomnia must be based on the particular patient: His/her own opinion of what's the best way to proceed is critical. Will some folks want or need sleeping pills? Yes. Will other folks not want them at all? Yes. Will some folks want or need or embrace CBT? Yes. Will other folks find CBT more trouble than its worth? Yes. Neither approach is inherently "right" for everybody. And for many, many folks a more varied approach will be critical: They will likely need some medicine to help them sleep---either in the short run or on an intermittent basis for a long time. And they will likely need some changes in behavior to really be able to manage the insomnia in the long run. One without the other will simply not properly address all the issues. And so a combined approach is called for.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by DavidCarolina » Fri Mar 04, 2011 5:41 am

The Wal Mart knock off of Unisom, Doxolymate Succinate, half tab works perfectly for me.

Ive discovered that the other major OTC sleep med ( sominex) only keeps me awake.

You might also try Excedrin or Tylenol PM.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by cortez356 » Fri Mar 04, 2011 7:47 am

WOW:

I never meant to open up a huge can of worms! I do not have imsonia. Or at least my understanding of what comprises insomnia. I fall asleep within 20 minutes. My problem is staying asleep. After 5 to 6 hours I awake and cannot go back to sleep. I do not like to take HD nmedications. Ambien and all it's brothers and sisters will not be part of my therapy. I am seeing my GP next week and am going to ask to be tested for Testoserone levels. Just another possibility. I did read some of the links that robysue provided and did follow some of those suggestions. I spend a lot of time in front of my computer and that is one thing I am trying to change. Definitely an addiction. Perhaps limiting evening use of my computer will have a positive effect. Thanks to all for the advice. And of course more reading from robysue!!


Bob

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by robysue » Fri Mar 04, 2011 8:57 am

cortez356 wrote:WOW:

I never meant to open up a huge can of worms! I do not have imsonia. Or at least my understanding of what comprises insomnia. I fall asleep within 20 minutes. My problem is staying asleep. After 5 to 6 hours I awake and cannot go back to sleep.
There are several kinds of insomnia. One kind is consistently waking too early---i.e. waking significantly before you are ready to wake up for the morning and not being able to get back to sleep.

Do you take naps during the day? Trying your best not to nap during the day may help you either stay asleep a bit longer or be able to get back to sleep faster.

And finally: How do you feel physically when you wake up too early? If you feel refreshed or rested, it's just possible that with CPAP preventing most of the apneas, you are now getting enough quality sleep at 5--6 hours to feel as well as you used to feel with 8 hours of sleep fragmented by the apnea. But if you don't feel refreshed or rested, then obviously you need more sleep than you're currently getting.
I do not like to take HD nmedications. Ambien and all it's brothers and sisters will not be part of my therapy. I am seeing my GP next week and am going to ask to be tested for Testoserone levels. Just another possibility. I did read some of the links that robysue provided and did follow some of those suggestions. I spend a lot of time in front of my computer and that is one thing I am trying to change. Definitely an addiction. Perhaps limiting evening use of my computer will have a positive effect. Thanks to all for the advice. And of course more reading from robysue!!


Bob
Best of luck in figuring out a way to sleep as long as you want and need to sleep.

And yes, try limiting the computer time. I know it's easier said than done: That's one of the things that I have NOT been completely successful with yet---even though I *know* I sleep much better when I give myself an hour or two between computer time and bedtime.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by M.D.Hosehead » Fri Mar 04, 2011 12:53 pm

jonquiljo wrote:
M.D.Hosehead wrote: Diphenhydramine, the only sleep med available OTC, is a sedating antihistamine, has none of the above characteristics, and is far safer than alcohol. It can cause varying degrees of AM sedation, which effect is usually controllable by dose reduction.
Not true. Doxylamine Succinate is used in Unisom (and generics).

In the Rx arena, Dr's give Trazodone, Seroquel, Elavil, you name it - antipsychotic medications (generally) to help people to sleep.

I'm pleased to be corrected on facts: diphenhydramine isn't the only OTC hypnotic. As you say, doxylamine is similar, in that it is a sedating antihistamine.

To correct a factual statement you made: Elavil, Seroquel and trazadone are not antipsychotic drugs; they are antidepressants with sedating side-effects.

Another sedating antidepressant, doxepin in low doses, received FDA approval for insomnia in March 2010.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/41444.php


Benzodiazepines and related sedatives work by stimulating GABA receptors. (GABA is an inhibitory neurotransmitter.) They can produce tolerance dependence and withdrawal symptoms, though the risk is low with the Z drugs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z-drug

OTOH, antidepressants and antihistamines produce sedation by blocking histamine receptors, histamine being an excitatory neurotransmitter.

GABA-acting sedatives tend to be better at initiating sleep, and may be better for insomnia related to anxiety.
Histamine-acting sedatives tend to be better at maintaining sleep, and so potentially more useful for insomnia due to depression, pain, and for physiologic short sleepers.

The above is just FYI; I'm not wading into the discussion of whether pharmacologic sleep aids should be used at all.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by cortez356 » Fri Mar 04, 2011 9:55 pm

robysue: I had this sleep problem at least 2 years before CPAP. My Sleep apnea is very mild. The complaints that lead to my diagnosis were the lack of sleep, physical weakness and unable to increase muscle mass. My BP was also still too high even with 2 meds. Weight loss and a low salt diet lowered my BP to where I cut one of the meds in half. 4 months after APAP things have improved. I am able to ride my mtn. bike and feel better during the day. I still have to work on upper body strencth. I think clearer. But am still not where I want to be. I even wonder if I could get say 8 hours of sleep maybe I would not need my machine( probably wishfull thinking!). I am going to do a short trial of 1 25 mg.Benadryl and see what happens. This has been an interesting discussion and I truly appreciate all the help. Sometimnes when I read this forum I thank G-d that my health issues are not severe . Thanks everyone.

Bob

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by robysue » Sat Mar 05, 2011 10:11 am

Bob (aka cortez356),

Best of luck with using the 25 mg.Benadryl to get and stay asleep. I sincerely hope that it helps you sleep better.

I'd also suggest that you pick up Sound Sleep, Sound Mind by Dr. Barry Krakow. You will find plenty to think about and plenty of potentially useful suggestions on working towards a long-term solution to your insonmia problem.

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Re: OTC sleep med

Post by chunkyfrog » Fri Jul 20, 2012 11:15 am

Troll post deleted.
You're welcome.

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