
Bipolar and Sleep Deprivation: What Actually Happens
Originally published at steadyline.app Sleep deprivation is one of the strongest and most consistent triggers for manic episodes in bipolar disorder. Research shows that even a single night of significantly reduced sleep can initiate hypomanic symptoms, and two consecutive nights of poor sleep substantially increases the risk of a full mood episode. The mechanism is neurological, not psychological: sleep loss destabilizes the circadian and neurotransmitter systems that are already vulnerable in bipolar disorder. I need to tell you something that took me far too long to learn. When I don't sleep, what happens to me is not what happens to most people. Most people get tired. They're groggy, they need coffee, they push through the day and crash early that night. Their system self-corrects. Mine doesn't. When I lose sleep, something different happens. Something that feels, at first, like the opposite of tiredness. And that's exactly what makes it dangerous. What actually happens: the cascad
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