
But this phrase is rather an understatement. Everyone's woken up early. Maybe you had a flight to catch. Or you were drunk and threw up. Or you just needed a pee. That's early morning waking, but not the depressive kind. When you're depressed, the waking up is the least of your problems.
Suddenly, you are awake, more awake than you've ever been. And you know something terrible has happened, or is about to happen, or that you've done something terribly wrong. It feels like a Eureka moment. You can be a level-headed person, not given to jumping to conclusions, but you will be convinced of this.
In a panic attack, you think you're going to die. Your heart is beating too fast, your breathing's too deep: your body is exploding, you can feel it too closely. With this, With this, you think you should die or even, in some sense, already have. It feels cold: you can no longer feel the warmth of your own body.
The moment passes; the terrible truth that you were so certain of five minutes ago becomes a little doubtful. Maybe it's not quite so bad. At this point, the wakefulness goes too, and you become, well, as tired as you ought to be at 3 am. You try to go back to sleep. If you're lucky, you succeed. If not, you lie awake until morning in a state of miserable contemplation.
While it's happening, you think that you're going to feel this way forever; bizarrely, you think you always have felt this way. In fact, this is the darkest hour.
*
Why does this happen? There has been almost no research on early morning waking. Presumably, because it's so hard to study. To observe it, you would have to get your depressed patients to spend all night in your brain scanner (or, if you prefer, on your analyst's couch), and even then, it doesn't happen every night.
But here's my theory: the key is the biology of sleep. There are many stages of sleep; at a very rough approximation there's dreaming REM, and dreamless slow-wave. Now, REM sleep tends to happen during the second half of the night - the early morning.
During REM sleep, the brain is, in many respects, awake. This is presumably what allows us to have concious dreams. Whereas in slow wave sleep, the brain really is offline; slow waves are also seen in the brain of people in comas, or under deep anaesthesia.
When we're awake, the brain is awash with modulatory neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, norepinephrine, and acetylcholine. During REM, acetylcholine is present, while in slow-wave sleep it's not; indeed acetylcholine may well be what stops slow waves and "wakes up" the cortex.
But unlike during waking, serotonin and norepinephrine neurons are entirely inactive during REM sleep - and only during REM sleep. This fact is surprisingly little-known, but it seems to me that it explains an awful lot.
For one thing, it explains why drugs which increase serotonin levels, such as SSRI antidepressants, inhibit REM sleep. Indeed, high doses of MAOi antidepressants prevent REM entirely (without any noticeable ill-effects, suggesting REM is dispensable). SSRIs only partially suppress it.
Ironically, SSRIs can make dreams more vivid and colourful. I've been told by sleep scientists that this is because they delay the onset of REM so the dreams are "shifted" later into the night making you more likely to remember them when you wake up. But there could be more to it than that.
The fact that REM is a serotonin-free zone also explains wet dreams. Serotonin is well known to suppresses ejaculation; that's why SSRIs delay orgasm, one of their least popular side effects, although it's useful to treat premature ejaculation: every cloud has a silver lining.
So, having said all that: could this also explain the terror of early-morning waking? Suppose that, for whatever reason, you woke up during REM sleep, but your serotonin cells didn't wake up quick enough, leaving you awake, but with no serotonin (a situation which never normally occurs, remember). How would that feel?
Using a technique called acute tryptophan depletion (ATD), you can lower someone's serotonin levels. In most people, this doesn't do very much, but in some people with a history of depression, it causes them to relapse. Here's what happened to one patient after ATD:
But here's my theory: the key is the biology of sleep. There are many stages of sleep; at a very rough approximation there's dreaming REM, and dreamless slow-wave. Now, REM sleep tends to happen during the second half of the night - the early morning.
During REM sleep, the brain is, in many respects, awake. This is presumably what allows us to have concious dreams. Whereas in slow wave sleep, the brain really is offline; slow waves are also seen in the brain of people in comas, or under deep anaesthesia.
When we're awake, the brain is awash with modulatory neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, norepinephrine, and acetylcholine. During REM, acetylcholine is present, while in slow-wave sleep it's not; indeed acetylcholine may well be what stops slow waves and "wakes up" the cortex.

For one thing, it explains why drugs which increase serotonin levels, such as SSRI antidepressants, inhibit REM sleep. Indeed, high doses of MAOi antidepressants prevent REM entirely (without any noticeable ill-effects, suggesting REM is dispensable). SSRIs only partially suppress it.
Ironically, SSRIs can make dreams more vivid and colourful. I've been told by sleep scientists that this is because they delay the onset of REM so the dreams are "shifted" later into the night making you more likely to remember them when you wake up. But there could be more to it than that.
The fact that REM is a serotonin-free zone also explains wet dreams. Serotonin is well known to suppresses ejaculation; that's why SSRIs delay orgasm, one of their least popular side effects, although it's useful to treat premature ejaculation: every cloud has a silver lining.
So, having said all that: could this also explain the terror of early-morning waking? Suppose that, for whatever reason, you woke up during REM sleep, but your serotonin cells didn't wake up quick enough, leaving you awake, but with no serotonin (a situation which never normally occurs, remember). How would that feel?
Using a technique called acute tryptophan depletion (ATD), you can lower someone's serotonin levels. In most people, this doesn't do very much, but in some people with a history of depression, it causes them to relapse. Here's what happened to one patient after ATD:
[her] previous episodes of clinical depression were associated with the loss of important friendships had, while depressed, been preoccupied with fears that she would never be able to sustain a relationship. She had not had such fears since then.We don't know why tryptophan depletion does this to some people, or why it doesn't affect everyone the same way, and it's pure speculation that early morning waking has anything to do with this. But having said that, the pieces do seem to fit.
She had been fully recovered and had not taken any medication for over a year. About 2 h after drinking the tryptophan-free mixture she experienced a sudden onset of sadness, despair, and uncontrollable crying. She feared that a current important relationship would end.
14 comments:
Hey Neuro:
REM is disposable?? LOL. What pipe are you smoking, Big Guy? We NEED REM to function during the day. Without it, we become like blabbering idiots! Oh, and as to the etiology of early or middle insomnia? STRESS. RUMINATION. PROBLEMS IN YOUR LIFE. ISSUES YOU THINK YOU CAN'T SOLVE. That will do it. Ciao.
Anon, Xanadu, did you just bail out on me? chicken.. clearly he's not smoking your pipe Big Guy. I ought to sanction you with a butt plug! :) Neo I must admit I feel like this 24/7. I watch life pass me by, touching the side of my pillow wondering what next?
Anonymous: Well... it surprised me too... but all those people on MAOi's seem to do fine, despite not having any REM for at least several months (sometimes it comes back, a bit, after that.)
As for insomnia, no doubt worries will keep you awake at night, but, that really doesn't explain why you wake up at 4 am with them seeming much worse than they previously did.
veri: I have to admit that while you are an acquired taste, you are pretty funny. And there is something endearing about you..... How's my punctuation?
Oh I'm a delicacy now.. I guess I could be yummy . Honestly? I'd like to eat those two little love dots.. or at least GENTLY massage it with my wet () I'm just kidding, thanks :)
As I understand it, REM sleep occurs throughout the night (about 5 to 7 times), not just in the second half. From what I've read, it starts about 90-120 minutes after falling asleep (less time for a depressed individual). Each period of REM sleep lasts longer than the previous, with the final one being the lengthiest.
I'd also add that, although it may seem that REM (and therefore dreaming) is indispensable, the fact that evolution appears to have gone so far out of its way to protect it (e.g. the paralysing of anti-gravity muscles) would suggest there is a need for it.
(...this is the last comment I make, promise...)
I've heard it suggested that the reason antidepressants work is *because* they ablate the bodies ability to REM. The evidence put forward is that sleep deprivation, or more precisely REM sleep deprivation, appears to be an excellent antidepressant.
Another explanation might be this: SSRIs often lift some of the depressive symptoms but aggravate anxiety and irritability in sufferers with a family background of bipolar disorder. Even if the person doesn't actually become manic, they may feel restless and self-medicate with alcohol to get to sleep. This will lead to the well known phenomenon seen in alcoholics of middle of the night awakening (after having drunk oneself to sleep). I have spoken with many people who have in fact become more anxious on SSRIs, and booze is one of the oldest tranquillizers known to man. With its own effects on sleep patterns.
The other possibility is of people whose depression is in remission thanks to meds, but who suffer from side effects of sleepiness from their meds. If they then drink too much caffeine to keep moderately productive at work, their sleep can be disrupted.
Then again, one may just have a nocturnal dog or cat who wakes one up and then the thought of unpaid bills does the rest...
There's a quote somewhere about the "wee sma's" not being a very nice time.
Lucy Maude Montgomery made reference to them particularly in the context of WWI, which is where I first heard the reference. It doesn't seem to be a Burns quote exactly, so I'd love to find the original.
WTF are "wee sma's" ?
This is even worse than acronymania, sucker!
The wee small hours of the morning, as in 1, 2 and 3 o'clock.
On another artistic note, bipolar playwright Sarah Kane wrote a play called 4:48 psychosis, referring to 4:48 am.
Sadly she killed herself before it was performed.
Retriever: There are certainly other potential explanations, but I've experienced textbook early-morning waking on a few occasions, before I started taking antidepressants. This was enough to convince me that the textbooks are onto something.
Interestingly, since I started taking venlafaxine, I have been waking up at 4 or 5 am almost every morning. But it's not early-morning waking because I feel fine when I do. Rather, I think it's because I get extremely thirsty and my mouth gets dry (a common side effect of venlafaxine).
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