Posted by chiron on August 18, 2007, at 9:11:06
From what I see, this is still an unknown to researchers, but I was wondering if anyone has know of any hypotheses.
I know that sleep is very much tied to mood and for bipolars, less sleep often triggers mania, or going without sleep may improve mood short-term.
My cycling used to be more unpredictable. I never knew how I would wake up, or how I would vary. But I knew that usually later in the day I would be in a more opposite state that I was in the morning. Sometimes even after a nap I would be worse than right before my nap.
Then for a few months when anxiety was introduced to me, it was extreme in the mornings. I woke up feeling freaked out about nothing every morning at 5:30. It was useful to get me to go running, but that didn't resolve it. I know cortisol is higher in the mornings, but my am blood test showed that it was in range.
Now my most common "norm" is not to wake up with anxiety, but want to sleep more. And I have to remind myself that my mood usually improves a little as the day goes on (although it never improves as much as I would like).
So why is depression often worse in the mornings for people with mood disorders?
poster:chiron
thread:776914
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20070815/msgs/776914.html