Some of the most common reasons why you always feeling tired.
Photo source: Pixabay
Photo source: Pixabay
- Chronic fatigue syndrome is characterized by extreme fatigue and sleepiness that interferes with daily life. This disorder affects women more than men and is more common at perimenopause when women in their 40's and 50's experience a decline in reproductive hormones.
- Pregnancy. Hormonal changes during pregnancy, particularly increased progesterone levels, can make you sleepy. Fatigue in pregnancy is most common during the first trimester, though some women experience it through the entire pregnancy.
- Anemia is a deficiency of red blood cells, or hemoglobin. Without enough hemoglobin in the blood, your muscles and organs don't get adequate levels of oxygen, which deprives them of energy and makes you feel fatigued.
- Sleep apnea is a sleep disorder that causes interruptions of breathing during sleep. People with sleep apnea wake often at night because they are struggling to breathe, leading to low quality sleep and daytime sleepiness.
- Thyroid problems. Both an underactive and overactive thyroid can affect sleep quality and contribute to feelings of fatigue, says David Cutler, MD, a family medicine physician at Providence Saint John's Health Center. Fatigue is a common symptom of an underactive thyroid, but an overactive thyroid can also increase your heart rate, making it difficult to sleep, Cutler says.
- Poorly controlled diabetes can affect sleep quality because if your blood sugar is high, you will need to urinate frequently, which can make it difficult to stay asleep, Cutler says. Fatigue is also a common symptom of high blood sugar levels.