Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum. ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
This patient support community is for discussions relating to apnea, children’s sleep issues, jet lag, insomnia, narcolepsy, restless leg syndrome (RLS) and snoring.
Your fatigue issues could have many possible causes - vitamin or hormone deficiencies, sleep disorders, stress, disease, etc. It is a common symptom for so many diseases. The best thing to do is to talk with your doctor about your fatigue. First, he can prescribe something to help with the fatigue while he determines a cause. Secondly, he can run all sorts of tests to rule out the most obvious things. Lastly, if an answer doesn't become readily apparant, he can request an overnight polysomnogram (sleep study). A sleep study will show if you have sleep apnea, narcolepsy, catapexy and other sleep disorders.
I had terrible fatigue which I thought was related to depression. After three psychiatrists and numerous medications, my last shrink asked me about my sleep. I had known for over 20 years that I have apnea just from my own observation. Well, apnea side effects include fatigue and depression. A sleep study proved apnea and I've been on CPAP ever since. My fatigue has not resolved, but my MD recently ran tests that show a vitamin B-12 and testosterone deficiency. Once I begin getting my injections, I hope the fatigue will resolve.
Good luck and I hope it's something simple.
Curt
Because circulation and thus oxygen to your brain is so important, anything that could compromise it should be ruled out. Add to that your reported light sleep and daytime sleepiness, and I would think you would be a candidate for a sleep study sooner than later. There are other sleep disorders that can also be picked up by a sleep study. Your general practitioner can order you a sleep study, but be sure it is at a reputable accredited sleep lab. If they are scheduling far out, ask them to call you if they have a cancellation and can get you in sooner. Diagnosing and treating a sleep disorder could fix all, most, or some of your symptoms. Still need to work with your docs to pinpoint any other contributing factors to how you feel.
Thanks again for your replies!
I just wanted to chime in on this post because I have Narcolepsy. While your symptoms seem similar to many with N ; without ruling out apnea first it's hard to say which it could be- the symptoms can be extremely similar. I would make sure to ask about the pituitary causing sleep issues - the hypothalamus & pituitary are responsible for so many things including sleep.
Good Luck with the Neuro and please let us know how it went.