All symptoms

By symptom

Insomnia.

You can't get to sleep. You can't stay asleep. Or both.

What’s actually going on

How I think about this.

Insomnia is the most common sleep complaint in adult medicine and one of the most reflexively treated with the wrong tool. The first-line move in conventional care is a hypnotic prescription. Those medications work in the short term but do not address the system that is making sleep difficult in the first place, and most produce dependency or tolerance over time.

The two presentations I see most are sleep-onset insomnia (cannot fall asleep) and sleep-maintenance insomnia (cannot stay asleep). They usually come from different causes. Sleep-onset trouble is almost always a stress-hormone problem: cortisol that should fall through the evening stays elevated, often driven by late eating, screen light, alcohol, or chronic stress arousal. Sleep-maintenance trouble is usually a blood-sugar problem first: glucose drops in the second half of the night, the adrenal system fires cortisol to pull it back up, and you wake.

The other drivers that often hide underneath: subclinical hypothyroid, magnesium and B-vitamin gaps, sex hormone shifts in perimenopause, sleep apnea (especially in men over 40 and women in perimenopause and beyond), and the medication list.

The physician’s lens

How I read this in practice.

I read insomnia against the daily cortisol curve and the glucose response to evening eating. A salivary cortisol panel across the day. Blood sugar tracked with a CGM if the case warrants it. Sex hormones with binding proteins for women in perimenopause and beyond. The thyroid axis with reverse T3. Magnesium and B-vitamin status from the metabolomic panel. For sleep-maintenance complaints in men over 40, I screen for sleep apnea early.

What I’d test first

The data that explains it.

Insomnia work needs the cortisol curve, blood sugar in real time, and the hormonal context. The CGM is unusually informative here because the 3am wake is almost always blood-sugar driven.

While you wait

Moves worth making before testing.

These are the levers I’d pull while we set up the workup. Most of them produce real signal inside two weeks.

  1. Bright light within an hour of waking. Outside if at all possible. The strongest sleep signal you can give yourself, free.
  2. Stop eating three hours before bed. Especially carbohydrates. The overnight glucose curve changes.
  3. Cut alcohol entirely for two weeks. The second half of your night will look different.
  4. Anchor your wake time, even on weekends. Let bedtime drift toward it for two weeks before changing anything else.

If two weeks of the basics doesn’t move the needle, that is exactly the kind of presentation a Precision Call exists for. Your biology is telling you something the lifestyle layer cannot fix on its own.

Start here

Want me to read your data?

A complimentary 30-minute call by phone or video with me. You tell me what is going on. I tell you how I would approach it. You decide if I am the right physician for you.