Sleep inversion

Sleep inversion or sleep-wake inversion is a reversal of sleeping tendencies. Individuals experiencing sleep-wake inversion replace diurnal habits for nocturnal habits, meaning they are active at night and sleep during the day. Common symptoms of sleep inversion include persistent wakefulness during night time hours and excessive sleepiness during the day. Sleep-wake inversion is an individual symptom, not a condition by itself. It can be due to many reasons, with the main two being circadian rhythm disorders and encephalopathies.

Individuals with the delayed sleep phase type of the disorder exhibit habitually late sleep hours and an inability to change their sleeping schedule consistently. They often show sleepiness during the desired wake period of their days. The sleep phase cycles may or may not be impaired depending on the underlying cause.[1][2] For example, synucleinopathies such as MSA are known for causing REM issues alongside other sleep impairments.[3]

Severe cases of delayed sleep phase disorder or jet-lag are non-encephalopathic causes of sleep inversion. Encephalopathic causes are varied, but the most prominent example is African trypanosomiasis, or sleep sickness, in those who end up developing CNS (Central Nervous System) involvement.

Any encephalitis or neurological issue that can cause sleep problems affect the circadian rhythm, which by extension, include sleep inversion.[4]

Symptoms

Sleep Inversion is established by a reversal of the normal sleep-wake cycle, in which individuals experience wakefulness during nighttime hours and excessive sleepiness during the day. Cognitive impairment, mood disturbances, and fatigue are common side effects of an inverted sleep schedule.

In clinical populations, sleep inversion occurs alongside psychiatric conditions such as depression and anxiety, reflecting a bidirectional relationship in which disrupted sleep worsens mental health outcomes.[1] Sleep phase cycles may also be impaired depending on the cause of irregularities, and in some cases, the entire sleep architecture, including the macrostructure and stage progression, is affected.[5]

Causes

Encephalopathic causes

Encephalopathic causes of sleep inversion are caused by conditions that directly affect brain function and disrupt the neural mechanisms that govern the sleep-wake cycle.

Tick-Borne Encephalitis

Tick-Borne Encephalitis is a viral infection that affects the brain. Studies found that some people with Tick-Borne Encephalitis developed problems with their sleep cycle. This is because Tick-Borne encephalitis affects the central nervous system, which could impact areas that regulate sleep and circadian rhythms. In rarer cases, patients developed sleep inversion, though less severe sleep problems such as fatigue and daytime sleepiness were more common. These findings suggest that tick-borne Encephalitis can disrupt patients' circadian rhythm.[6]

Multiple Sclerosis

In neuroinflammatory conditions such as Multiple Sclerosis, sleep inversion arises due to alterations in sleep architecture, including disruptions to sleep macrostructure and the cyclic alternating pattern. Inflammatory cytokines present in the cerebrospinal fluid of MS patients have been linked to these changes in the sleep architecture, representing a non-encephalopathic cause of sleep inversion.[7]

Psychiatric and neurological dysregulation

Sleep Inversion is strongly associated with delirium and other acute neurological states. Circadian rhythm inversion is a common symptom of delirium, and is a part of a reciprocal relationship with sleep disruption.[8]

In parasomnia patients, disrupted neural connectivity may impair normal sleep initiation and contribute to sleep inversion. Studies using multimodal neuroimaging shows that abnormal brain connectivity in NREM parasomnia relates to disrupted sleep homeostasis, increasing vulnerability to inverted sleep patterns after sleep deprivation.[9]

Other causes

Severe cases of delayed sleep phase disorder (DSPD), jet-lag, or other circadian rhythm disorders are non-encephalopathic causes of inverted behaviors. For example, in very severe DSPD, a patient may only feel sleepy right after sunrise and having a waking time late in the day that renders them completely awake for the resulting night. Another more common example is those with jet-lag whose circadian rhythms are not entrained to the destination they have arrived at, which depending on the differences between the time zones of the original location of the traveler and the destination, may cause a temporary reversal of the rhythm until the body can adjust.

History

The study of inverted sleep patterns has roots in 19th century European medicine, when awareness of abnormal sleep behaviors began to emerge. The formal categorization of sleep inversion as distinct from other sleep disorders developed gradually through the 20th century alongside advancements in polysomnography and circadian rhythm science. The growth of sleep medicine as a recognized research discipline helped establish standardized frameworks for identifying and classifying conditions like sleep-wake inversion. [10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorders - Neurologic Disorders". Merck Manual Professional Edition. Archived from the original on 20 August 2025. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  2. ^ "Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorders". Cleveland Clinic. Archived from the original on 20 August 2025. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
  3. ^ Matar E, McCarter SJ, St Louis EK, Lewis SJ (6 January 2021). "Current Concepts and Controversies in the Management of REM Sleep Behavior Disorder". Neurotherapeutics: The Journal of the American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics. 18 (1): 107–123. doi:10.1007/s13311-020-00983-7. ISSN 1878-7479. PMC 8116413. PMID 33410105.
  4. ^ Chiffi G, Grandgirard D, Stöckli S, Valente LG, Adamantidis AR, Leib SL (24 May 2022). "Tick-borne encephalitis affects sleep-wake behavior and locomotion in infant rats". doi.org. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
  5. ^ Romigi A, Stampanoni Bassi M, Caccamo M, Gilio L, Ceriello F, Finardi A, Vitrani G, Rosenzweig I, Furlan R, Buttari F, Centonze D (4 December 2025). "Sleep Macrostructure, Cyclic Alternating Pattern and <scp>CSF</scp> Cytokines in De Novo Relapsing–Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: A Controlled Polysomnographic Study". Journal of Sleep Research. doi:10.1111/jsr.70248. ISSN 0962-1105.
  6. ^ Chiffi G, Grandgirard D, Sendi P, Dietmann A, Bassetti CL, Leib SL (February 2022). "Sleep-Wake and Circadian Disorders after Tick-Borne Encephalitis". Microorganisms. 10 (2). doi:10.3390/microorganisms10020304. ISSN 2076-2607. Archived from the original on 10 July 2024.
  7. ^ Romigi A, Stampanoni Bassi M, Caccamo M, Gilio L, Ceriello F, Finardi A, Vitrani G, Rosenzweig I, Furlan R, Buttari F, Centonze D (4 December 2025). "Sleep Macrostructure, Cyclic Alternating Pattern and <scp>CSF</scp> Cytokines in De Novo Relapsing–Remitting Multiple Sclerosis: A Controlled Polysomnographic Study". Journal of Sleep Research. doi:10.1111/jsr.70248. ISSN 0962-1105.
  8. ^ Levinsohn EA, Radhakrishnan V, Euting H, Kaplan GB (16 October 2024). "Pharmacological Management of Sleep–Wake Disturbances in Delirium". The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 65 (3): 285–302. doi:10.1002/jcph.6151. ISSN 0091-2700.
  9. ^ Miletínová E, Piorecký M, Koudelka V, Jiříček S, Tomeček D, Brunovský M, Horáček J, Bušková J (December 2023). "Alterations of sleep initiation in NREM parasomnia after sleep deprivation – A multimodal pilot study". Sleep Medicine: X. 6 100086. doi:10.1016/j.sleepx.2023.100086. ISSN 2590-1427.
  10. ^ Schulz H (6 May 2022). "The history of sleep research and sleep medicine in Europe". Journal of Sleep Research. 31 (4). doi:10.1111/jsr.13602. ISSN 0962-1105.

Further reading

  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th text revised ed.). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. 2000.
  • Buysse DJ, Morin CM, Reynolds CF (1995). "Sleep Disorders". In Gabbard GO (ed.). Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders (2nd ed.). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press.
  • Hobson JA, Silvestri R (1999). "Sleep and Its Disorders". In Nicholi AM Jr (ed.). The Harvard Guide to Psychiatry. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
  • "Sleep-wake inversion (Concept Id: C0338497)". MedGen. NCBI. NIH. Retrieved 2 August 2024.
  • Thorpy MJ, Yager J (2001). The Encyclopedia of Sleep and Sleep Disorders (2nd ed.). New York: Facts on File.