Friday, 12 June 2026

Using cannabis for sleep isn’t harmless – a neurologist explains how it can trap people in a cycle of dependency

From theconversation.com

For millions of people, cannabis has become the unofficial prescription for lost sleep. But what feels like a solution may be quietly making the problem worse.

Consider these two cases:

She is 15 and has been lying in bed for the past hour. It is past midnight, and her brain will not quiet down. Her school bus comes at 6:20 a.m. She is getting anxious, knowing that she needs to wake up in six hours. She did all the right things: turned off her phone at 10 p.m., tried melatonin. So tonight she tries something a friend recommended: a cannabis gummy. Within 20 minutes, she’s asleep.

He is 34, a veteran who did two tours and has struggled with sleep since coming home. It takes him two hours to fall asleep, and when he does, he is jolted awake by relentless nightmares. He hasn’t slept more than three hours a night in months, and it’s catching up with him. His buddy swears that cannabis helped him, and with a six-month waiting list for a sleep consultation at the Veteran’s Affairs medical center and a cannabis dispensary six blocks away that’s open until 10 p.m., the decision doesn’t feel complicated.

Both will tell you cannabis works for their specific needs. They are not entirely wrong. But no one has told them what is actually happening inside the brain when the lights go out. It’s complex, and for them – as for many others – ultimately it’s a trap.

As a neurologist specializing in sleep and brain performance, I write this not as someone opposed to cannabis but as someone who regularly sees patients whose sleep has quietly unravelled after months or years of use, especially teenagers and veterans.

I believe the public deserves a more complete picture than they currently have due to the limited research that’s available.

Why the teenage brain is especially vulnerable

From the early teens through the mid-20s, the brain is actively under construction, clearing out weak or redundant connections and reinforcing the circuits responsible for judgment, emotional regulation and stress response.

Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the psychoactive component of cannabis, interferes with this process directly by acting on the endocannabinoid system, one of the primary regulatory networks guiding it.

A 2021 brain imaging study of 799 teenagers found that cannabis use was associated with dose-dependent thinning of the cerebral cortex – meaning the more cannabis a teenager used, the thinner their prefrontal cortex became. The prefrontal cortex is the region of the brain responsible for judgment, decision-making and impulse control. Thinning of the cortex in this region has been associated with increased impulsivity, poorer decision-making and reduced inhibitory control.

Another seldom-discussed factor is how puberty affects sleep. Hormonal changes and brain maturation in adolescence shift the internal biological clock, known as the circadian rhythm, toward a later sleep schedule.

And teenagers are far from alone. A 2025 study found that more than 1 in 5 young adults in the U.S. turn to cannabis or alcohol to fall asleep. For teenagers who are already sleep-deprived and facing early school start times, cannabis can become its own nightly fix.

Teenagers’ developing brains are particularly vulnerable to harms from cannabis use. Fiordaliso/Moment via Getty Images

What cannabis is doing while you sleep

Sleep is not passive. It is well-organized, purposeful and foundational to our physical and brain health.

Every night, the brain cycles through distinct stages, each serving a specific function. All sleep stages matter, but the one that matters most is REM sleep, the dreaming stage. This is when the brain processes the emotional weight of the day, locks in learning and resets the brain circuits that govern mood, judgment and resilience.

THC has a sedative effect at low doses but is stimulating at high doses. Cannabis also contains other cannabinoids – plant-derived compounds such as CBD and CBN that interact with a system in the body that produces its own cannabinoids and contributes to the sedative effects of cannabis.

Here is where it gets complicated.

THC does help people fall asleep faster, but that effect fades quickly as the body adapts to regular use. The same gummy that once helped someone fall asleep quickly does less. They need more to get the same effect.

In addition, falling asleep quicker is not the same as sleeping well. A 2025 review of the research to date found that cannabis does not consistently improve sleep overall, including how long people stay asleep or how restful that sleep is.

In a separate study, chronic daily users spent significantly more time awake during the night and got less restful sleep compared with nonusers; another study found that using cannabis close to bedtime had similar effects.

In other words, the subjective sense of sleeping better does not match what the brain recordings show.

When relief becomes reliance

At this point many people are using cannabis not because it is working well, but because stopping feels worse.

Even when chronic cannabis users have the willpower to stop, they often face brutal withdrawal symptoms that are more severe than what drove them to cannabis in the first place. Sleep disturbance, including insomnia and disturbing dreams, is described as a common manifestation of cannabis withdrawal. In addition, two-thirds of users report other symptoms such as anxiety, depressed mood, restlessness, irritability, decreased appetite or a combination of these symptoms that often persist for weeks after stopping use.

The discomfort of withdrawal drives many people to keep using it.

This is the trap – it’s quiet and insidious, which makes it harder to see.

Cannabis works just enough to feel like a solution. Night after night it dulls the problem without fixing it, until stopping feels unthinkable. When someone finally tries to quit, their sleep falls apart. So they go back. The original reason they could not sleep has not been identified or treated, and it hasn’t gone away.

Trying to quit cannabis use can bring about severe withdrawal and other symptoms. Jamie Grill/Tetra Images via Getty Images

Veterans and the need for long-term recovery

The developing brain is one kind of vulnerability. The traumatized brain is another.

Post-traumatic stress disorder affects an estimated 12% to 23% of post-9/11 veterans, compared with 6% to 8% of the general population. Sleep disturbances affect 70% to 90% of military personnel with PTSD. People with PTSD commonly have nightmares that are visceral, relentless and exhausting. They might be jolted awake with a pounding heart, multiple times a night, for years.

As a result, many veterans turn to cannabis to help them sleep. It’s understandable, especially when it can take weeks or months to get an appointment with a mental health practitioner.

But the data on outcomes for veterans is sobering. Those with cannabis use disorder – meaning cannabis use they struggle to control despite negative consequences, which affects roughly 1 in 4 veterans who use cannabis nonmedically – have higher rates of depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation and respond much more poorly to evidence-based PTSD treatments.
And then there is withdrawal. When a veteran tries to stop, the same symptoms that cannabis seemed to quiet come roaring back in potentially dangerous ways – rebound insomnia and nightmares, worsening depression and, in some cases, thoughts of suicide.

Because these withdrawal symptoms so closely mirror PTSD itself, many veterans interpret the return of symptoms as their condition worsening, not as withdrawal, so they go back to cannabis. And the cycle continues.

What actually works, and why it’s so hard to get

Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia, or CBT-I, is considered the first-line treatment for persistent insomnia. Research shows that it outperforms every sleep medication, cannabis included.

This therapy works by modifying sleep habits, regulating sleep-wake schedules, reducing arousal and reframing unhelpful beliefs about sleep. A form of treatment known as image rehearsal therapy, in which patients rewrite the storyline of a recurring nightmare and mentally rehearse the new version while awake, has been shown to be effective for veterans with trauma-related nightmares. But trained CBT-I providers are scarce, wait times are long, and most primary care settings do not offer it.

In other words, the people most vulnerable to the sleep-related harms of cannabis use are the least likely to have access to treatments that address the underlying problem, and the most likely to get caught in a negative cycle.

For those already caught in that cycle, quitting abruptly rarely works and often makes things worse. Research shows that CBT-I can reduce both insomnia and cannabis use at the same time – treating the root problem so cannabis no longer feels necessary.

Sleep is the foundation on which memory, mood, judgment and recovery are built.

The 15-year-old who cannot fall asleep and the veteran who wakes gasping at 3 a.m. both deserve evidence-based information about what is happening in their brains, and real access to care that treats the root cause.

https://theconversation.com/using-cannabis-for-sleep-isnt-harmless-a-neurologist-explains-how-it-can-trap-people-in-a-cycle-of-dependency-280904 

Thursday, 11 June 2026

Middle insomnia: what it is and how to beat it

From saga.co.uk

By Patsy Westcott

Waking repeatedly in the night and being unable to sleep again is the form of insomnia most suffered by older people. But there are ways to boost your chance of a better night’s sleep 

It’s 3am and you’re awake. You turn over, plump up the pillow, adjust the duvet and try a different position. You take a sip of water, realise you need the loo, tell yourself it can wait, then decide it can’t, and drag yourself to the bathroom. By the time you get back into bed, you’re wide awake and thoroughly fed up. However hard you try, sleep won’t come. 

If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Doctors call it middle insomnia, or sleep-maintenance insomnia, and it’s especially common in older people.

How common is middle insomnia?

“Sleep efficiency is undoubtedly more challenging as we get older,” says consultant neurologist Professor Guy Leschziner, professor of neurology and sleep medicine at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals.

Around half of older people report difficulty dropping off or staying asleep. Of these, sleep-maintenance insomnia, defined as multiple awakenings or prolonged wakefulness in the middle of the night, affects 50 to 70%.

“Typically, people report waking at 2, 3 or 4am and being unable to fall asleep again for hours,” says psychologist and sleep expert Dr Lindsay Browning of Trouble Sleeping.

Why are older people more affected?

“There are several destabilising influences on sleep that come with age,” says Prof Leschziner, author of The Nocturnal Brain: Nightmares, Neuroscience and the Secret World of Sleep.

“They include weakening of the brain circuitry that controls when we fall asleep, when we wake up and how stable sleep is, together with changes in the secretion of the sleep hormone, melatonin.

“Melatonin is the main chemical signal to the brain that it’s time to go to sleep and stay asleep. With age, its nocturnal peak is much lower, making it harder to maintain sleep,” he explains.

What physical changes can cause middle insomnia?

Certain physical aspects of getting older play a role too. They include: 

  • Bladder weakness or irritability
  • Joint and back pain or stiffness
  • Menopausal symptoms such as night sweats or anxiety
  • Medications, such as blood pressure-lowering beta blockers and calcium channel blockers, antihistamines, steroids and some antidepressants  

Medical conditions can also be culprits according to Prof Leschziner. Common offenders include:

  • Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), in which breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep
  • Periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD), which causes repetitive, uncontrollable jerking or twitching of the limbs
  • Restless legs syndrome (RLS) a neurological condition that creates an irresistible urge to move the legs

“People with these conditions often feel as though they haven’t had any sleep,” says Prof Leschziner. In fact, this can be a trick of the brain, making you feel as though you haven’t slept a wink when you may actually have been drifting in and out of sleep.

What should you do if you’re affected?

Both experts agree that it’s best to not to lie there tossing and turning as this strengthens the association between bed and wakefulness.

“If you feel like you have been awake for about 20 minutes or more, it can help to leave the bedroom and go somewhere else,” says Dr Browning.

Prof Leschziner suggests sitting in dim lighting and doing something fairly unstimulating until you feel sleepy again. Dr Browning, meanwhile, recommends doing something “pleasant and engaging” to take your mind off not sleeping.

As she explains: “The aim is not to make yourself sleepier. It’s to take your mind off the fact you’re awake. This can reduce the link between bed, wakefulness and frustration, so that when you return to bed, sleep is more likely to follow naturally.”

Senior woman reading on tablet at night
Getty

Distracting and/or calming activities could include:

  • Reading
  • Watching TV
  • Listening to the radio
  • Creative activities such as puzzles, word searches or colouring books
  • Humming a favourite tune to calm the brain and vagus nerve  

And what shouldn’t you do?

One of the biggest mistakes is checking the time. “Calculating how much longer it is until morning, and how annoyed you are that you’ve woken up can increase anxiety, making it harder to go back to sleep,” says Dr Browning.

She recommends setting an alarm for the latest time you need to wake up. “If you wake in the middle of the night, ask yourself: ‘Has my alarm gone off yet?’ If it hasn’t, it’s not morning, and you can try to go back to sleep.’

Another thing to avoid is scrolling on your phone. This can make it harder to get back to sleep because it strengthens that connection between being in bed and being awake and mentally switched on, and secondly, because the content of what you scroll may leave you feeling alert, agitated or distracted.

Instead, she suggests trying a calming breathing exercise or what experts call cognitive shuffling: mentally listing random, unrelated words or objects to gently distract the brain.

Should you have a snack?

Having something to eat in the middle of the night is not a good idea either, as it can train your body to wake up expecting food at that time. Instead try a light snack before bed, such as a piece of wholemeal toast with nut butter or a glass of warm milk.

And while we’re on food and drink, bear in mind that eating late in the evening, as well as caffeine and alcohol, are well-known sleep disruptors.

Are there any treatments?

According to the British Geriatrics Society, it’s best to steer clear of sleeping pills if you can. Older people are more susceptible to their sedating effects, which can lead to daytime drowsiness and a higher risk of falls and serious injury.

The good news is there are plenty of non-pill options and, even if you have struggled with insomnia for decades, you can still improve your sleeping habits.

“Long-standing insomnia is often maintained by unhelpful behaviours and anxiety about sleep itself, and this can be changed,” says Dr Browning.

CBT-I (cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia) uses a range of techniques to tackle the habits and thought patterns that keep insomnia going – such as going to bed earlier to compensate for sleep loss or worrying about how you will function the next day – as well as so-called sleep restriction or sleep compression.

These techniques involve working out how long you usually spend asleep then strictly limiting the time you spend in bed to that time. It sounds counter-intuitive to deliberately restrict your sleep to treat insomnia, but over time it creates mild sleep deprivation. “Eventually, the sleep pressure that builds up as a result stabilises your sleep pattern, enabling you to gradually increase the amount of time you spend asleep in bed,” explains Prof Leschziner.

The Sleepio app, which uses CBT-I, is recommended by NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) and is thought to be especially beneficial for over 65s.

What matters, both experts agree, is not to accept broken nights as something you have to put up with. Once you understand what lies behind them, small changes to your routine can make a real difference and help you back to more restful nights.

Types of insomnia

  • Short-term (acute) insomnia: lasts for less than three months and is often triggered by stressful events, jet lag or changes in the environment, such as a heatwave or extreme cold.
  • Long-term (chronic) insomnia: lasts for three months or more and is often linked to underlying medical, psychological or lifestyle factors.
  • Sleep-onset insomnia: difficulty dropping off at the beginning of the night. This is the kind most common in younger adults
  • Sleep-maintenance (middle) insomnia: frequent awakenings during the night, or waking in the middle of the night and struggling to drop off again. This is the one most commonly suffered by older people
  • Insomnia with early morning awakening: when you wake up very early in the morning, e.g. 5am.

If poor sleep is causing anxiety, frustration or daytime fatigue, speak to your GP or a sleep professional. 


https://www.saga.co.uk/magazine/health-and-wellbeing/middle-insomnia-what-it-is-and-do-you-have-it

Wednesday, 10 June 2026

New digital platform treats insomnia and anxiety in seniors

From news-medical.net

Cognitive behavioural therapies for insomnia (CBT-I) are increasingly being delivered online in order to improve accessibility. However, although insomnia and anxiety frequently occur together in older adults, few interventions address both conditions simultaneously. A new digital platform developed by researchers at the Centre de recherche de l'Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal (CRIUGM), in collaboration with Concordia University, Université Laval and the Université de Montréal, aims to fill that gap.

The results of a clinical trial, published in the journal Age and Ageing, highlight the feasibility and effectiveness of the program, with promising applications for improving mental health and sleep among older adults.

An accessible program designed for seniors

The research team conducted a randomized controlled trial involving 80 adults aged 65 and older who were experiencing insomnia. The eCBT+ program consists of a seven-week intervention featuring one 30-minute interactive video module per week.

Insomnia and anxiety are very common among older adults. Although cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is the first-line treatment for insomnia, access remains very limited because of the availability of trained professionals and the high cost of treatment."

Dr. Thien Thanh Dang-Vu, neurologist, laboratory director at CRIUGM and professor in Concordia University's Department of Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology

Accessible on computer, tablet or smartphone, this platform is the first of its kind available in French. It was specifically designed for older users, with adjustable features such as text size and contrast settings, as well as scenarios that reflect their everyday experiences.

Significant clinical results

The research team conducted a randomized controlled trial with 80 adults over the age of 65 suffering from insomnia. The study aimed to assess the usability, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of the eTCC+ program compared to a waitlist control group. 

In terms of usability, participants rated the platform as user-friendly and intuitive, achieving a usability score of nearly 70 per cent. Acceptance of the platform was driven primarily by its ease of use and the perceived usefulness of the program.

"From a clinical perspective, the intervention proved highly effective. Participants who completed the eCBT+ program experienced significant improvements in sleep efficiency and reductions in symptoms of both insomnia and anxiety compared with the control group," says Mathilde Reyt, the study's first author and a postdoctoral researcher at CRIUGM and Concordia University.

"Our findings show that web-based tools offer a promising and clinically relevant approach to promoting sleep and mental health among older adults. This combined digital CBT program represents an important step toward making these treatments more accessible to everyone," concludes Dr. Dang-Vu.

The research team plans to expand its sample size to confirm the program's long-term effects, with particular attention to potential benefits for cognitive function and daytime quality of life among older adults.

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20260609/New-digital-platform-treats-insomnia-and-anxiety-in-seniors.aspx

Tuesday, 9 June 2026

New Study: This Surprising Mental Trait Could Be the Key to Beating Insomnia

From inc.com

Constantly tired? A simple factor may be contributing to your inability to find high-quality sleep. Here’s what to know 

Could feeling wiser than your years be worsening your days? Possibly. 

A new study published in Sleep found a link between subjective age (the age you feel) and how well you sleep. People with a higher subjective age reported more symptoms of insomnia and feeling more tired throughout the day. The results will be presented at the Sleep 2026 annual meeting in mid-June. 

The study was conducted by the VA Boston Healthcare System, Virginia Commonwealth University, and the National Sleep Foundation. 

The scientists ultimately found that age discrepancy can act as a predictor in overall health and longevity. In the study, age discrepancy is defined as the mismatch between a person’s subjective age, how old a person feels, and their actual, chronological age. Positive values indicated feeling older while negative values indicated feeling younger. The researchers noted that adults who felt older had more symptoms of insomnia, more sleep-related impairments, and lower overall sleep health and regularity.

“These findings suggest how people perceive their own aging may have important implications for sleep and overall well-being,” said Joseph M. Dzierzewski, the principal investigator of the study. “Understanding subjective age could help inform future approaches to support healthier sleep and quality of life across the lifespan.”

To come to this conclusion, the researchers collected survey responses from 3,177 adults with a mean age of 42.8. Participants were asked questions to assess their subjective age, insomnia, overall sleep health, and sleep-related impairment. The subjects were evaluated on their mental health and asked to self-report any physical health symptoms that may affect their sleep.

The scientists used correlational and regression analyses to look at the associations between age discrepancy and sleep. A parallel mediation, a test to see if any predictors affected the outcome through two or more variables simultaneously, was then used to explore the indirect effects sleep had on physical health. 

The scientists found that those who reported feeling older than their actual age had statistically significant poorer sleep and sleep-related impairments. Additionally, they found that those who had higher age discrepancies also had higher rates of insomnia and worse subjective physical health. 

                                                                                                                                                                     Photo: Getty Images

Key takeaways from the research

Dzierzewski told Inc. that this doesn’t have to start in a doctor’s office; it can begin with a simple internal check. “The question is almost like, how are you feeling? Do you feel older? Do you feel younger? Do you feel right on?”

The good news, he said, is that nothing about this picture is fixed. “Your subjective age is certainly changeable, your sleep is changeable. Staying physically active, eating a good healthy diet, and challenging some of those negative beliefs we have about aging.”

He added that consistently feeling older than your age is “not a warning sign, but something you should pay attention to. It’s a sign that your sleep or your health maybe needs more support than you’re giving it.”

And while the study focused on sleep, Dzierzewski thinks the implications can stretch to other areas of your life. Embracing aging more realistically, not chasing youth, and aligning expectations with where you actually are could, he said, bring everything a little more into balance: “All of these things are changeable.”

https://www.inc.com/lucia-auerbach/new-study-this-surprising-mental-trait-could-be-the-key-to-beating-insomnia/91354563

Monday, 8 June 2026

Research Shows Sleeping 6.4 to 7.8 Hours a Night May Help Slow Aging

From verywellhealth.com

By Mira Miller

Key Takeaways

  • Sleeping between 6.4 to 7.8 hours a night is linked to the slowest biological aging across multiple organ systems.
  • Too little sleep (less than 6 hours) and too much sleep (more than 8 hours) can accelerate biological aging through different pathways.

Getting enough sleep is an essential part of staying healthy throughout the lifespan. New research suggests that the ideal amount is between 6.4 to 7.8 hours, while getting either more or less than is associated with increased biological aging.

                                                 Sleeping too much or too little may speed up aging.   Peera_Sathawirawong / Getty Images

What the Research Shows

Researchers conducted the study, published in Nature, by analysing self-reported sleep data from half a million participants in the UK Biobank and comparing it with data about their biological age. Biological age refers to how slow or fast their organs are aging compared to their actual chronological age.

The researchers found that sleeping between 6.4 to 7.8 hours was associated with the slowest biological aging across multiple organ systems, including the brain, liver, lungs, immune system, skin, adipose tissue, and pancreas.

"This study suggests that sleeping too little or too much can accelerate biological aging," said Karen Lincoln, PhD, a professor of environmental and occupational health at UC Irvine Joe C. Wen School of Population & Public Health. "It also confirms that sleep is foundational to healthy aging."

Specifically, researchers identified a consistent U-shaped relationship between sleep duration and biological aging, meaning biological aging is lowest in the middle range and increases at both extremes of sleep duration.

Too little sleep is defined as fewer than 6 hours, while too much is defined as more than 8.

Why Does Sleeping Too Much or Too Little Matter?

Shorter and longer sleep duration have distinct biological pathways, Lincoln explained. She said short sleep is a direct driver of accelerated biological aging as it's associated with heightened physiological stress, systemic inflammation, immune dysregulation, and metabolic disruption which can affect cardiovascular, metabolic, musculoskeletal, and neuropsychiatric systems. 

Long sleep, on the other hand, appears to be more concentrated in brain-related and neuropsychiatric outcomes, like depression or cognitive issues, she said. It might be a marker of underlying disease that the body is already managing, or an adaptive response to stress, rather than a direct driver of accelerated aging.

"The findings reinforce that sleep duration isn’t just a lifestyle choice, it is a biological signal," said Joseph Dzierzewski, PhD, a sleep scientist who directs the scientific mission of the National Sleep Foundation. "Deviating too far in either direction can reflect or contribute to accelerated aging across the body."

Where the Study Falls Short

The study does have an important limitation worth noting, Lincoln said: it relies on a single, self-reported measure of sleep by asking participants how many hours they sleep per day, on average.

But Lincoln said sleep is multidimensional and there are a wide range of measures to determine one’s sleep health. For example, sleep regularity measures whether you’re going to bed and waking up at the same time every day, sleep latency measures how long it takes you to fall asleep after you go to bed, and sleep disruptions include whether you have difficulty falling back to sleep after waking up at night.

Sleep disorders like sleep apnoea also impact many adults and are disproportionately underdiagnosed and untreated in many Black Americans, she added.

"While the number of hours you sleep is important, it doesn’t capture sleep quality and represents only one slice of a much richer picture of sleep health," she said.

What It Means For You

Despite the limitations, Dzierzewski said the results provide a biological stamp of approval for the National Sleep Foundation’s widely cited sleep duration recommendations, which state that most adults need 7 to 9 hours of sleep per night and most older adults need 7 to 8 hours of sleep per night.

"The NSF ranges remain the right target for overall health and well‑being," he said. "If your goal is specifically to support healthy biological aging, this study suggests that consistently sleeping in the 7–8 hour zone may be especially protective."

While this may be true for most people, everyone is different, so Lincoln said it's most important to gauge how you feel when you wake up.

If you feel rested, restored, and energised, she said you are likely getting enough sleep, regardless of whether the clock says 6.5 or 7.5 hours. But if you consistently wake up tired, foggy, and have low energy, that is a signal worth paying attention to, even if your sleep duration is within that recommended range.

"Sleep is essential for healthy aging: your brain clears metabolic waste, your immune system recalibrates, and your organ systems repair during sleep," she said. "Good sleep quality is important for your health no matter how you measure it."

https://www.verywellhealth.com/sleeping-hours-and-aging-11978844