After a long day, the prospect of being awakened by a hot flush or night sweats is the last thing anyone desires when trying to fall asleep. Menopause can throw up all kinds of challenges when it comes to maintaining a healthy and happy sleep routine, with fatigue becoming another symptom to manage in the midst of significant hormonal changes.
There’s certainly no magic solution to navigating the impact of menopause on sleep. By incorporating some proven strategies, however, you can find a way to ease back into sleep after a menopause-related interruption. Here’s a range of tips you can try for the next time you’re woken from a peaceful slumber, as well as key information about the relationship between menopause and sleep.
As women enter into menopause, the natural production of hormone levels starts to fluctuate. Oestrogen begins to decline, resulting in a wide range of physical symptoms and negative side effects. One of the most common (and recognised) of these is hot flushes, which leave women feeling as if a sudden sensation of heat has spread through their body in quick succession.
Unfortunately, these hot flushes aren’t just the domain of the daytime hours and can often interrupt slumber. For many women, this can become a cycle of frequent awakenings and subsequent difficulty in returning to sleep.
If you’ve been woken up as a result of menopause’s symptoms intruding on your peace and quiet, don’t panic. Put these tips to work to support your return to sleep:
Ensure you’re in a sleep-friendly environment: It’s much harder to fall back asleep if your environment isn’t conducive to sleep in the first place. Create a cool, dark, and quiet room to give yourself the best chance of achieving high-quality sleep. Fans or air-conditioning can both be used to lower room temperature, and black-out curtains can give you more control over intrusive lights.
While these tips may help you to fall back asleep after you’ve been woken up by menopausal symptoms, there are a number of ways you can support yourself in achieving higher quality sleep in the first place.
One of these lifestyle supports is in the area of food and drink intake. What you consume can have a significant impact on your sleep quality, either supporting a restful night’s sleep or making it more difficult to achieve one. Research recommends the following:
As well as interrogating your diet for opportunities to incorporate sleep-supporting nutrients, maintaining a regular exercise schedule can be a proactive way to enhance your rest. Regular physical activity has been directly linked to improvements in sleep quality.
This is particularly relevant for menopausal women, where exercise can help to reduce the impact of hot flushes. It can also be useful in managing stress levels, as well as promoting a naturally deeper sleep as a result of physical weariness. It’s recommended to wrap up exercising a minimum of three hours before bedtime in order to avoid increasing your alertness through physical activity.
Even after you’ve implemented various strategies to manage sleep disturbances, you may find that menopausal symptoms continue to disrupt your sleep significantly. If this is your ongoing experience, it’s time to seek professional support and advice.
A trusted medical practitioner can offer this support through completing a comprehensive evaluation of your individual situation. During this process, they’ll review your overall health, medical history, the intensity of your symptoms, and their impact on your daily quality of life. From this evaluation, they’ll be able to provide recommendations about the various pathways available to you to help you manage your symptoms effectively.
One such medical intervention is hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Here, declining natural production of oestrogen and progesterone are supplemented through synthetic hormones, which can lead to a reduction in menopausal symptoms. For women struggling with hot flushes and night sweats, HRT can be transformative in their sleep experiences.
Whether you’re sleeping soundly each night, or you can’t remember the last time you weren’t kept awake by frustrating symptoms, you don’t need to navigate the ins and outs of varying menopausal symptoms alone.
Find support for every aspect of your menopause experience with the friendly expert team at Australian Menopause Centre.