Overview: Sleep-Wake Disorders

When Exhaustion Drives the Cycle of Substance Use & Relapse

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What Are Sleep-Wake Disorders?

Sleep-wake disorders are conditions characterized by disturbances in the quality, timing, or amount of sleep that cause significant distress and impairment in daily functioning. These are clinical disorders—not simply “poor sleep habits”—with profound effects on mood, cognition, and physical health. For families, sleep disturbance often predicts relapse most reliably.

Understanding Sleep-Wake Disorders

Insomnia Disorder

Difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early despite adequate opportunity for sleep. This is the most common sleep disorder in addiction.

What it looks like:

Hypersomnolence Disorder

Excessive sleepiness despite adequate sleep, with daytime sleep episodes or difficulty being fully awake after waking. This is distinct from simply being tired.

What it looks like:

Circadian Rhythm Sleep-Wake Disorders

Misalignment between the body’s internal clock and required sleep-wake schedule. The sleep itself may be normal—but it occurs at the wrong times.

What it looks like:

Dual Diagnosis Stats:

Prevalence: 36-91% of individuals with alcohol use disorder experience insomnia (compared to 10% of the general population)¹

Co-Occurrence: Sleep disturbance is a significant predictor of relapse—greater than age, employment, or depression ratings²

Persistence: Sleep dysfunction can persist up to 2 years into recovery, maintaining ongoing relapse vulnerability³

How Do Sleep-Wake Disorders Contribute to Relapse?

Sleep disturbance is the only withdrawal symptom shared by every class of addictive substance—alcohol, opioids, stimulants, cannabis, and sedatives all disrupt sleep during use and withdrawal.

  1. Sleep Deprivation Impairs Judgment
    Chronic exhaustion degrades the executive functions needed to resist cravings.
  2. Substances Become a Sleep Aid
    Alcohol and sedatives provide temporary relief—but worsen sleep architecture.
  3. Without Treating Sleep Disorders, Relapse Is Likely
    Insomnia can persist for months or years into recovery, creating ongoing vulnerability.
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How Sleep-Wake Disorders Are Identified & Diagnosed

Sleep disorders in individuals with substance use disorders present a diagnostic challenge: substances both cause and mask sleep problems. Withdrawal insomnia may look identical to primary insomnia, and substance-induced sleep disruption must be distinguished from underlying sleep disorders. Accurate diagnosis requires extended observation during sustained sobriety.

What proper diagnosis requires:

"Sleep disturbance is the only withdrawal symptom that appears with every substance class. It's also one of the strongest predictors of relapse. Treating sleep disorders is essential to preventing relapse."

Long-Term Treatment for Sleep-Wake Disorders and Addiction

Sleep disorders and substance use disorders reinforce each other through shared brain chemistry. Recovery requires time for both conditions to be properly diagnosed, treated, and stabilized. Our long-term, progress-based model provides the extended structure needed for genuine healing.

  1. Time for Sleep Architecture to Heal
    Restoration requires sustained sobriety measured in months, not weeks.
  2. Accurate Diagnosis Requires Extended Observation
    It takes time to separate sleep disorders from symptoms of SUD.
  3. Measuring Progress by Sleep Quality, Not Days
    Clients advance when sleep normalizes, not when a calendar date arrives.
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Burning Tree Ranch is the Nation’s only authentic long-term treatment program for chronic relapse.