The Sleep-Migraine Connection

Sleep and migraines share a bidirectional relationship. Poor sleep can trigger migraines, and migraines can disrupt sleep. Understanding this cycle is key to breaking it.

How Sleep Affects Headaches

Too Little Sleep

  • Sleep deprivation lowers the pain threshold
  • Increases levels of proteins that trigger migraines (like CGRP and substance P)
  • Disrupts serotonin regulation
  • Reduces the body's ability to cope with other triggers

Too Much Sleep

  • Oversleeping can be just as problematic
  • Disrupts normal circadian rhythm patterns
  • May cause caffeine withdrawal from delayed morning coffee
  • Weekend oversleeping is a common migraine trigger

Irregular Sleep

  • Shifting sleep and wake times is particularly triggering
  • Shift workers and new parents have significantly higher headache rates
  • Jet lag is a well-documented migraine trigger

Sleep Disorders and Headaches

Several sleep disorders are more common in headache sufferers:

  • Insomnia - affects up to 50% of migraine patients
  • Sleep apnea - causes morning headaches due to oxygen deprivation
  • Restless leg syndrome - more prevalent in migraine sufferers
  • Bruxism (teeth grinding) - can trigger tension-type headaches

Sleep Hygiene for Headache Prevention

The Basics

  1. Consistent schedule - same bedtime and wake time every day, including weekends
  2. Cool, dark room - ideal temperature is 65-68 degrees F (18-20 degrees C)
  3. Screen-free wind-down - avoid screens 30-60 minutes before bed
  4. Limit caffeine - none after 2 PM
  5. Avoid alcohol - it fragments sleep even if it helps you fall asleep

Advanced Tips

  • Morning light exposure - 15-20 minutes of sunlight helps regulate circadian rhythm
  • Regular exercise - but not within 3 hours of bedtime
  • Relaxation routine - progressive muscle relaxation or guided meditation to manage stress
  • Address anxiety - racing thoughts are a top cause of insomnia

When to See a Sleep Specialist

Consider a sleep evaluation if you:

  • Snore loudly or your partner notices you stop breathing during sleep
  • Wake up with headaches most mornings
  • Feel unrested despite adequate sleep hours
  • Have difficulty falling or staying asleep more than 3 nights per week

Tracking the Pattern

Log both your sleep quality and headache occurrences to identify your optimal sleep window. Most adults need 7-8 hours, but your ideal amount may differ. Consistency matters more than duration.

The this free app makes it easy to log both sleep quality and headache episodes in one place, helping you spot the connection between your sleep patterns and migraine frequency. This free migraine tracker app to start tracking your triggers and finding relief.