Why do i feel lightheaded after waking up

Do you ever wake up one morning and start getting a strange heavy feeling in the head, like your brain is going numb? Surely, you’re probably thinking there’s something wrong, like you’ve just woken up with a massive migraine or headache. Surprisingly enough, it’s not as dire as you might think, unless you experience it regularly. Even if it may not require attention from a health professional, here’s what you should know about morning dizziness.

What causes you waking up dizzy?

Some of the most common causes of waking up feeling dizzy and heavy-headed includes low blood pressure (also known as hypotension), low blood sugar (most often if you have diabetes), dehydration, hangovers, and ear infections such as labyrinthitis. If you’re taking prescription medication, make sure that dizziness is not one of the possible side effects. Medications that can cause this symptom include antidepressants, antibiotics, and immunosuppressants. However, morning dizziness doesn’t often require medical attention unless a more serious underlying condition is present. This condition can often be vertigo.

Can lack of sleep cause dizziness? Yes and no. Though sleep deprivation normally doesn’t directly lead to it, at least one study has found that disturbances in sleep for those with inner ear disorders can cause dizziness. Insomnia is also a disorder that can also lead to feeling dizzy after waking up, as well as fatigues, headaches, and mental health issues. Sleep apnea is another condition that can cause morning dizziness, since it disrupts one’s breathing during sleep, leading to reduced oxygen.

What are the symptoms?

If you wake up and your head feels weird, you can experience several different symptoms. These include balance issues, wooziness, lightheadedness, and feeling like the room you’re in is spinning. Should you also experience dry lips, headaches, and thirstiness, you’re most likely dehydrated. Oftentimes, this can be the result of drinking too much alcohol or caffeine, taking diuretics (also known as “water pills”), or simply not drinking enough water.

Lowered blood pressure can also result from when one changes their position after waking up from sleep. Symptoms from this can include fainting and impaired vision. In general, dizziness after waking up can be a consequence of lack of sufficient blood flow to the brain, which leads to a drop in both energy and glucose.

How do you avoid morning dizziness?

Part of treating this condition comes with making certain lifestyle adjustments. These include exercise, sleeping more, minimizing consumption of alcohol and caffeine, eating better, and quitting smoking. It’s also important to drink plenty of liquids—preferably water—during the day, particularly if you perform high-intensity workouts or work a labour-intensive job outdoors. A glass of water before bed and after waking up is another solution.

Normally, morning dizziness doesn’t last particularly long. If you frequently wake up feeling a weird, pulsating sensation in your head, there may be a bigger cause behind your symptoms. Ultimately, the best things you can do are to work out, eat healthy, don’t move your position too quickly upon waking up, and—most obviously—get a good night’s sleep.

Dizziness falls into many categories. It can be described as imbalance, lightheadedness or wooziness, vertigo, and is also related to anxiety or fear. Vertigo is a unique type of dizziness that often feels like the room spinning around you. However, you may experience any of these forms of dizziness when you wake up.

Physical therapy is often an effective way to manage your dizziness symptoms, and to rule out any serious causes of dizziness. At FYZICAL, we are highly trained to determine the cause of your dizziness, and provide effective strategies to minimize your dizziness without the need for medications or surgical procedures.

What is the Cause of dizziness?

Dizziness is not a disorder, but rather a symptom that can be caused by many things. For people who are experiencing dizziness when they wake up, it may be due to issues with the circulatory system or it could be due to a problem within the inner ear. Some medications can also cause morning dizziness, as can the use of alcohol and recreational drugs. Even dehydration or low blood sugar can make you feel dizzy.

One of the most common cause of dizziness in the morning is something called BPPV.

Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)

Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, or BPPV, is a disorder of the inner ear’s peripheral vestibular system. When we move, crystals in the inner ear activate tiny hair cells that send information about our movements to the brain. The crystals are located in a different part of the inner ear, attached to a membrane. Age-related degeneration or head trauma can cause these crystals to become detached, and they activate hair cells at inappropriate times. This signals to the brain that we are moving even when we’re not.

If you regularly experience vertigo when waking up, you may have BPPV. People with BPPV often get vertigo when they roll over in bed or turn their head. BPPV can also affect just one ear, which usually causes dizziness only when you turn or roll to one side. BPPV-related vertigo usually lasts for 15-20 seconds, but BPPV can also cause lightheadedness, nausea and vomiting, nystagmus (rapid, involuntary eye movements), and fainting.

Why do I always feel light headed when I wake up?

If you're dizzy in the morning right after you wake up, it could be a result of the sudden change of balance as your body adjusts from a reclining position to a standing one. Dizziness can occur when the fluid in your inner ear shifts, such as when changing positions quickly.

How do I get rid of lightheadedness when I wake up?

Dehydration Low blood pressure means your blood circulates to your brain slower, causing you to feel dizzy when you wake up. But the antidote is simple. “It can take time to rehydrate the body, so drink more and eat well throughout the day. If you're extra dehydrated, an IV with electrolytes may also help,” says Dr.