
Unable to get your beauty sleep? Do you find yourself constantly roused during the wee hours of the night? Being unable to sleep through the night could be a sign of a deeper health issue. Here are a few of the most common causes of nighttime waking and what you can do about it.
When blood sugar falls too low during sleep, the body releases adrenaline and cortisol to bring it back up. That surge of stress hormones wakes you up suddenly.
Clues this may be the cause:
You wake up between 1–4 a.m.
Heart racing, sweating, or shaking
Feeling anxious or hungry
Trouble falling back asleep
This is especially common in people with:
Diabetes
Prediabetes
Insulin resistance
People who eat very high-carb or sugary dinners
What to Do:
– Stabilize your blood sugar at night
This is one of the biggest hidden causes of 2–4 a.m. wake-ups.
Do this:
Eat protein + healthy fat at dinner (chicken, fish, eggs, beans, avocado, olive oil).
Avoid heavy sugar, desserts, white bread, pasta, and soda at night.
Try a small bedtime snack if you wake up hungry or shaky:
These prevent nighttime blood sugar crashes that trigger adrenaline.
Hormones control sleep. When they shift, sleep breaks.
This includes:
Low melatonin (common with age, light exposure at night, and stress)
High cortisol (stress hormone that should be low at night)
Perimenopause and menopause (estrogen and progesterone drops cause night sweats and awakenings)
Low testosterone in men
People often wake between 2–4 a.m. when cortisol surges too early.
What to Do:
– Lower nighttime cortisol (stress hormone)
Your brain must feel safe to stay asleep.
Do this before bed:
Turn off bright lights 90 minutes before sleep.
Avoid news, emails, and social media after 8–9 p.m.
Take a hot shower or bath (it signals the nervous system to relax).
Try slow breathing:
4 seconds inhale → 6–8 seconds exhale for 5 minutes.
This trains your nervous system to shift into sleep mode.
When you lie down, stomach acid can move upward into the esophagus and irritate nerves, even if you don’t feel heartburn.
This can cause:
Sudden waking
Coughing
Burning in the throat
A feeling of needing to swallow
Late dinners, alcohol, and spicy or fatty foods make this worse.
What to Do:
– Reduce reflux and nighttime digestion issues
If your stomach is waking you, you’ll never stay asleep.
Do this:
Stop eating 3 hours before bed.
Avoid alcohol, chocolate, spicy, greasy, and fried foods at night.
Sleep with your upper body slightly elevated.
Walk for 10 minutes after dinner to help digestion.
Long-term stress keeps the brain in “alert mode” even during sleep. The body doesn’t stay in deep sleep and wakes at every small change.
This is common in people with:
Anxiety
PTSD
Chronic inflammation
Long-term emotional or physical stress
What to Do:
– Calm an overactive nervous system
If you’re tired but wired, your nervous system is stuck in alert mode.
Daily habits that work:
Light exercise (walking, stretching, yoga).
Reduce caffeine after noon.
Spend time outdoors.
Keep a consistent bedtime and wake time.
Your nervous system thrives on rhythm.
Magnesium helps calm the nervous system and relax muscles. When it’s low, the brain becomes more sensitive to wake-ups.
Deficiencies in:
Magnesium
Potassium
B vitamins can all lead to night waking, muscle twitching, or restless sleep.
What to Do: – Replace missing minerals Low magnesium is one of the top causes of night waking. Helpful options: Magnesium-rich foods:
This helps muscles relax and quiets brain activity.
Frequent nighttime urination (nocturia) can wake you up multiple times.
Causes include:
Enlarged prostate in men
Overactive bladder
Diabetes
Sleep apnea
Certain medications
Often, the sleep problem comes first, then the bladder signals kick in.
An overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism) raises metabolism and stimulates the nervous system.
Signs include:
Night waking
Racing heart
Heat intolerance
Weight loss
Anxiety
Many common medications interfere with sleep, including:
Blood pressure drugs
Antidepressants
Steroids
Decongestants
Asthma inhalers
Alcohol may help you fall asleep, but it disrupts deep sleep and causes early-morning waking.
READ: Sleep Apnea 101: Everything You Need To Know For A Better Sleep
Sleep apnea is a common disorder in which you have one or more pauses in breathing or shallow breaths while you sleep, according to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. Every time this happens, you may be awakened from your sleep. Symptoms: Sufferers may experience migraines, sore throat, dry mouth, and chest pain. Some may even have nightmares, after the fact. How to fix the problem: Once diagnosed, doctors may treat the condition by suggesting certain lifestyle changes, such as weight loss, or quitting smoking as well as the use of a breathing assistance device at night, called a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machine.

By subscribing, you consent to receive emails from BlackDoctor.com. You may unsubscribe at any time. Privacy Policy & Terms of Service.