sleepyme1964 wrote:I do not like to wake up at 4:30, I just always do. I remove the CPAP then I stay in bed til 5 am and wake up and take the Nuvigil and lay on the couch for about 30 minutes to get woke enough to get ready for work.
Any idea what triggers those 4:30 wakes? Are you just done sleeping? Do you feel even remotely rested when you wake up at that hour?? Do you think there's something in the environment that's waking you up around then? Is it just a habit? In particular, have you by chance inadvertently trained yourself to wake up at 4:30 so that you can take the mask off at that time and then lay back down without the mask on? After you take the mask off at 4:30, how much sleep do you
accidently (or intentionally) get without the mask when you "stay in bed til 5 am and wake up and take the Nuvigil and lay on the couch for about 30 minutes"? Do you have an alarm clock set for 5 am to wake up you up to take the Nuvigil?
Overall, it sounds like you might have an hour or so of very drowsy/sleepy time without the mask on your nose every single morning. And if you are sleeping for much of that hour, that might be part of the problem.
And you still haven't answered my question about what you meant when you wrote you don't feel like you "slept for the night". Does that mean you feel like you've tossed and turned and have been awake or lightly dozing for much of the night in spite of the Ambien? Or does it mean you are conscious of several distinct wakes during the night, but you know there's some sleep between them? Or does it mean you don't remember waking up at all during the night, but you wake up exhausted and sleepy and not feeling rested in the morning?
I am on 6.5 mg of Ambien and I take it at night and go straight to bed.
So bedtime is 9:30 but it takes you about 30 minutes to fall asleep with the Ambien? And you stay in bed until 4:30? So that's a 7 hour "Time in Bed window" or 7.5 hours if we count the half hour after you go back to bed without the mask after the 4:30 wake. Perhaps part of your problem is just plain
not enough sleep time. And the only fix for that is either going to bed earlier or sleeping later. You could try moving bedtime back to 8:30 or 9:00pm and seeing if you still sleep until 4:30. Or you could try to train yourself to NOT wake up at 4:30 by NOT rewarding yourself by taking the mask off at 4:30 and then returning to bed to lie there until 5:00 am. If you could get rid of that unwelcome 4:30am wake and just sleep until it is time to wake up for the morning that too might make you feel more rested in the morning and better throughout the day.
Also, as SleepyBobR pointed out, that's a pretty big dose of the Ambien---particularly for a woman. The feds recently cut the recommended dose for women back to 5mg since we don't metabolize Ambien as fast as men apparently. And as SleepyBobR points out, Ambien is well known for causing morning hangovers. I'm dealing with that myself---I'm only taking a piddling 2.5 mg dose of Ambien at bedtime and it still takes me a good two hours to become fully functional on most mornings. You might check with your doc about cutting back on the Ambien a bit and seeing if it still allows you to get to sleep ok, but causes less of a problem in the morning.
I also second SleepyBobR's suggestion that you and your docs should consider whether both anti-depressants, the Ambien, and the Nuvigil are all needed. You should talk about
all your meds with each your docs, rather than just the meds they prescribed. It's possible that some kind of drug interaction is also contributing to some of your problems.
I don't keep the same schedule on the week-ends. I usually wake up at the same time however I nap on the couch on some Saturdays. If I something scheduled that day and don't have a restful weekend I pay for it the next week.
How much of that weekend nap time on the couch is PAP-less nap time??? Remember that any sleep without the PAP is apnea-filled sleep. It may feel no worse than the CPAP-sleep you get at night subjectively, but objectively it is worse for your body.
Also if you are getting substantial amounts of extra sleep on the weekends that may be making it harder for you to get to sleep and stay asleep during the week.
Some questions:
What time do you need to leave for work in the morning? How long does it take you to get ready for work? How long do you think it
should take you to get ready for work in the morning?
If you could set your sleep schedule to be whatever you
wanted it to be (regardless of work) AND you woke up feeling fine at the end of the sleep, when would you want to get up in the morning? Could you stand getting up at that time seven days a week?
If you could set your sleep schedule to be whatever you
wanted it to be AND you woke up feeling fine at the end of the sleep, when would you want to go to bed each night?