Overview - When Sickness Steals Sleep
- A prominent and severe sleep disturbance (e.g., insomnia, hypersomnolence) directly caused by the physiological effects of a general medical condition.
- DSM-5 Criteria:
- Evidence from history, physical exam, or labs confirms the link.
- Not better explained by another mental or sleep disorder.
- Does not occur exclusively during an episode of delirium.
- Specify Type: Insomnia, Hypersomnolence, Parasomnia, or Mixed type.
⭐ High-Yield: Endocrine and neurological disorders are common culprits. For instance, hyperthyroidism often leads to insomnia due to ↑metabolic rate, while conditions like Parkinson's disease frequently disrupt sleep architecture.
Medical Causes - The Usual Suspects
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Neurologic Disorders
- Parkinson's Disease: Strong association with REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD).
- Alzheimer's Disease: Presents with "sundowning," agitation, and sleep fragmentation.
- Stroke: Can precipitate insomnia or sleep-disordered breathing.
- Epilepsy: Nocturnal seizures disrupt sleep architecture.
-
Respiratory Conditions
- COPD/Asthma: Nocturnal hypoxemia and frequent awakenings from dyspnea or cough.
- Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Linked to anatomical obstruction (e.g., obesity, tonsillar hypertrophy).
-
Endocrine/Metabolic
- Hyperthyroidism: Causes hyperarousal and insomnia.
- Hypothyroidism: Associated with hypersomnolence and sleep apnea.
- Diabetes: Sleep disturbed by nocturia, neuropathy, or nocturnal hypoglycemia.
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Other Key Causes
- Pain/Musculoskeletal: Fibromyalgia & arthritis cause pain-related arousals.
- GI: GERD leads to nocturnal awakenings from reflux.
⭐ Fatal Familial Insomnia is a rare, inherited prion disease causing intractable insomnia, autonomic dysfunction, and dementia, ultimately leading to death.

Iatrogenic Causes - Pills & Potions
- Distinguish from substance-induced sleep disorder; here, sleep issue is a side effect, not the goal of use.
- Insomnia-causing Medications:
- Corticosteroids (prednisone)
- β-blockers (propranolol)
- SSRIs (fluoxetine) - often transient
- Stimulants (methylphenidate)
- Decongestants (pseudoephedrine)
- Hypersomnolence-causing Medications:
- 1st-gen antihistamines (diphenhydramine)
- Benzodiazepines, Antipsychotics
- Nightmare-causing Medications:
- β-blockers
- Dopamine agonists (L-DOPA)
⭐ Propranolol, a highly lipophilic beta-blocker, readily crosses the blood-brain barrier and is frequently implicated in causing vivid dreams and nightmares.
Workup & Management - Sleuthing for Sleep
- History & Physical: Correlate timeline of medical illness and sleep symptoms.
- Initial Steps:
- Sleep Diary/Log: Patient-reported data over 2-4 weeks.
- Actigraphy: Wrist-worn device providing objective sleep-wake cycle data.
- Gold Standard Dx:
- Polysomnography (PSG): Crucial to rule out primary sleep disorders (e.g., OSA, RLS) or characterize parasomnias (e.g., RBD).
⭐ Polysomnography is essential to differentiate a sleep disorder secondary to a medical condition from a primary sleep disorder (e.g., OSA) merely exacerbated by the illness.
Primary Goal: Always treat the underlying medical condition first.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Always treat the underlying medical condition first as the primary management strategy.
- Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is strongly linked to hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and insulin resistance.
- Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) is frequently caused by iron deficiency anemia and chronic kidney disease.
- REM Sleep Behavior Disorder (RBD) is a major prodromal symptom for α-synucleinopathies (e.g., Parkinson's).
- Hyperthyroidism causes insomnia; hypothyroidism causes hypersomnolence.
- Nocturnal panic attacks arise from REM sleep, unlike sleep terrors (NREM sleep).
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