Tag: circadian rhythm

  • Fibromyalgia body clock

    Fibromyalgia body clock


    If you live with fibromyalgia, it can feel as though your body clock has a mind of its own. Many people talk about a “fibromyalgia body clock” that runs on a completely different timetable to everyone else. Not very helpful when your body seems to be running on a completely different timetable to everyone else.

    This is not another generic list of sleep tips. Instead, we are zooming in on your body clock, your circadian rhythm, and looking at how timing (when you sleep, wake, move and see light) can gently support pain, fatigue and brain fog alongside everything else you are already doing. We will also be honest about what the research actually shows, and where we are still making educated guesses.


    What you will take away from this

    Fibromyalgia seems to mess with the body clock in ways that matter. When your sleep and wake rhythms get disturbed, pain, fatigue and mood often spiral. The strongest signal from the research is not about magic gadgets or expensive supplements; it is about regularity. When you wake up and the difference between your daytime and nighttime patterns seems to matter more than chasing perfect sleep.

    Tools like CBT-I (cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia), morning light and low dose melatonin can help some people feel more in control, but they sit alongside everything else. They are adjuncts, not cures.

    If you also have ME/CFS or clear post exertional malaise, pacing and energy envelope management stay front and centre. Any timing tweaks need to work around that reality, not override it.

    Here is the reassuring bit: you do not need perfect routines. Tiny, sustainable shifts in timing can still make a difference when you are working with what your body can actually manage right now.


    Meet your body clock (and why it matters for fibro)

    Deep inside your brain, in a tiny cluster of cells in the hypothalamus, sits your master clock. It keeps roughly twenty four hour time, responds to light (especially in the morning), and helps coordinate hormones like cortisol and melatonin. It also influences body temperature, gut motility, immune signalling and even how you process pain.

    Most people’s internal clocks naturally run a touch later than twenty four hours. Without something to anchor them, they gradually drift later and later. For many of us, that anchor is morning light plus a fairly consistent wake up time.

    In fibromyalgia and related pain conditions, several studies have noticed a familiar pattern. People are more likely to prefer evenings, describe themselves as “night owls”, show bigger day to day swings in when they fall asleep and wake up, and have altered rhythms of melatonin and cortisol. That does not prove cause and effect, but it fits what many people with fibromyalgia describe: days and nights gradually sliding out of sync, pain and fatigue flaring when sleep becomes chaotic.


    What research actually says about the fibromyalgia body clock

    The evidence base is still small, but a few themes are emerging that can help us make better informed guesses.

    Morning light and a fixed wake time

    In one four week trial, people with fibromyalgia were divided into two groups. One group had bright morning light therapy, the other dimmer light. Both groups were also given a stable wake up time and some simple advice about bedtime.

    Both groups improved. Pain, mood, day to day function and sleep quality all got better, and the bright light group did not clearly outperform the dim light group. The researchers concluded that regular sleep and wake timing was probably doing most of the heavy lifting, rather than the intensity of the light itself.

    Melatonin: modest help, not a miracle

    Some older trials in fibromyalgia, and newer work in mixed chronic pain groups, suggest melatonin can modestly improve sleep quality and slightly reduce pain scores for some people, especially over the first few weeks. The effects often fade after about six weeks, though. Doses and formulations vary wildly from study to study – anywhere from one to ten milligrams, immediate release or slow release. We still do not have clear long term safety data or a single “best” dose.

    There is also one small trial in ME/CFS that used one milligram of melatonin plus zinc over sixteen weeks and found improvements in fatigue and quality of life. Promising, but not yet replicated.

    Melatonin is not suitable for everyone, particularly if you take several other medicines or live with epilepsy, bipolar disorder or more complex health conditions. It can cause morning grogginess, vivid dreams and, less commonly, mood changes. In the UK it is usually prescription only, which is another reason to talk it through with your GP or pain clinic first rather than experimenting on your own.

    CBT-I for insomnia

    For people with fibromyalgia who also have clear insomnia, CBT-I – a structured talking therapy focused on sleep patterns, thoughts and behaviours around sleep tends to outperform generic “sleep hygiene” advice. It also does better than standard CBT for pain when the main target is broken sleep.

    Improvements in pain and mood tend to be smaller than the sleep gains, but they can still be meaningful for some people.

    NICE does not currently recommend melatonin or light boxes specifically for fibromyalgia because the evidence is limited. Instead, guidance leans towards multimodal care: pacing, gentle movement within limits, psychological support where appropriate, and CBT-I for those with true insomnia.


    The big idea: give your body clock a daily anchor

    The most realistic change most of us can make is not fancy or expensive. It is about giving your fibromyalgia body clock a few consistent time signals every day, so it knows what counts as day and what counts as night.

    Those anchors might be getting up at roughly the same time most days, seeing natural light not too long after waking, keeping most of your eating, movement and social contact in the daytime, and making your evenings visibly and sensibly “quieter” with softer light and less stimulation.

    You do not need to hit all of these. Even one or two clear anchors, done gently and consistently, can start nudging your system in a kinder direction.


    Step 1: Choose a realistic wake up window

    For many people with fibromyalgia, especially those without post exertional malaise, the single most powerful shift is choosing a regular wake up time and sticking to it on most days.

    If your current pattern is all over the place, it is usually unhelpful to suddenly decide you will get up at seven every morning. Instead, look back over the last week and notice when you naturally wake if nobody is forcing you. Use that as your starting point. If you tend to wake somewhere around half past eight or nine, choose a half hour window in that range and aim to be out of bed within that window on most days.

    If you also live with ME/CFS or clear post exertional crashes, your anchor might need to be softer and later. The aim is gentle regularity, not dragging yourself out of bed in the middle of a crash just to “protect your rhythm”. You can always experiment with edging your window earlier by fifteen or thirty minutes once things feel more stable.


    Step 2: Use light as your “on switch” gently

    Light is the main signal for your master clock, but you do not need specialist equipment to begin with. If you can, open the curtains soon after you wake and spend ten to twenty minutes near a window with a drink. On better days you might manage to step outside, even if it is just onto a balcony or front step.

    If mornings are your worst time and you tend to wake very late, start from where you are rather than where you think you “should” be. If you usually first see daylight at one in the afternoon, aim to see it at half twelve for a week, then experiment with shifting that earlier in small steps – only if your body tolerates it.

    Some people use a bright light box, particularly in winter. These can be helpful in conditions like seasonal affective disorder. In fibromyalgia, though, the best evidence so far suggests that having a regular morning light routine mattered more than hitting a particular brightness. You can treat any gadget as a possible helper, not a cure.

    If you have a history of bipolar disorder, significant eye disease or you take medicines that make your skin or eyes more sensitive to light, speak to your doctor before using a light box.


    Step 3: Create quiet cues for “night mode”

    Evenings are about giving your brain clear signals that it is time to wind down. This does not require a long complicated routine, it is more about drawing a line between “day” and “evening”.

    That might look like switching from the main ceiling lights to lamps about an hour before bed, choosing lower stimulus activities such as an audiobook, podcast, familiar television or a paper book instead of fast scrolling, and keeping your largest meals earlier in the evening so you are not trying to sleep on a very full stomach.

    Some people with insomnia find blue blocking glasses helpful for a couple of hours before bed, especially if they use screens a lot. Most of the research for these is in general insomnia rather than fibromyalgia specifically, but they are relatively low risk and not usually expensive if you want to try them. Using the night mode or warm colour settings on your phone, tablet or laptop is a simple, free step in the same direction.

    If you already have a basic wind down routine, you do not need to add lots of extra steps. The main thing is that your brain can tell, most nights, when day has ended and night has begun.


    What about melatonin, light boxes and other circadian “hacks”?

    For adults, small doses of melatonin, often in the one to three milligram range, can shift the body clock slightly earlier if taken at the right time, usually one to two hours before your intended bedtime. In some fibromyalgia and chronic pain studies, this has led to better sleep and modest reductions in pain in the short term.

    At the same time, it is not a cure for fibromyalgia, and it is not right for everyone. It can cause grogginess, vivid dreams and occasionally changes in mood, and it can interact with other medicines. Because melatonin is prescription only for adults in the UK, it is best thought of as something to explore with your GP or pain team as a time limited trial, not something you put yourself on indefinitely.

    Bright light therapy boxes sit in a similar category. They can be helpful in certain circadian rhythm disorders and seasonal affective disorder, but in fibromyalgia the clearest message so far is that a regular morning routine matters more than a particular lux number. For people with ME/CFS we do not yet have strong evidence that bright light therapy improves post exertional symptoms or core fatigue, and it is not a specific NICE recommendation. If you do experiment, it is wise to start gently and keep an eye on boom and bust patterns, where a brief improvement leads to a big uptick in activity and then a crash.

    Blue blocking glasses and software night modes fall into the “low risk helper” category. They can make it easier for some people to fall asleep and stay asleep, especially in our very screen heavy evenings, but they are unlikely to transform fibromyalgia on their own.


    If you live with PEM or ME/CFS as well as fibro

    Many people reading this sit somewhere on a fibromyalgia ME/CFS Long Covid overlap. You might recognise delayed crashes after effort, have very limited energy to spare, or face days when getting out of bed at all feels like climbing a mountain.

    In that context, pacing and energy envelope management remain non negotiable. Any body clock work needs to be gentle enough that it does not trigger post exertional malaise. It is completely fine if your wake window is later than average, if it has to flex on crash days, or if family, caring roles or appointments mean your timing is far from textbook.

    A useful way to picture this is to imagine body clock work as sandpaper rather than a hammer. You are smoothing out a few rough edges, not remodelling the whole structure. If any suggestion in this article feels as though it would tip you into a crash, it is simply not the right step for you at the moment.


    Making this doable when you are already exhausted

    When you are dealing with chronic pain, fatigue and brain fog, even small changes can feel like a lot. It helps to treat this as a series of tiny experiments rather than a big lifestyle overhaul.

    You might begin with one simple anchor, such as opening the curtains within fifteen minutes of waking most days, or sitting in your usual spot by a window with a drink for ten minutes. Set a reminder on your phone, or leave a note where you will see it, so you do not have to hold it in your head.

    On more difficult days, the only realistic goal might be to keep today’s wake time within an hour of yesterday’s, if that is possible. If you share a home, you could ask a partner, family member or housemate to help with easy cues, opening the curtains or switching to lamps in the evening at an agreed time.

    If a week or two goes off track, that is not failure. It is simply information about what your body and life are like at the moment. You can always restart from where you are, not where you were.


    When to talk to your GP or specialist

    Self help changes can be useful, but they are not a substitute for proper assessment. It is worth speaking to your GP or specialist if you have had very little sleep for months despite trying basic changes, if someone has noticed loud snoring, gasping or pauses in your breathing at night, if you wake unrefreshed with morning headaches, or if your mood has dropped very low or you are having thoughts of self harm.

    It is also sensible to get medical advice before using melatonin or bright light therapy if you have a history of bipolar disorder or psychosis, or if you are already taking several medicines that make you drowsy.

    In that appointment, you can ask about referral options for services that offer CBT-I, whether melatonin might have a role in your specific case, and whether any of your current medicines might be making your body clock later or your sleep worse.

    Next read: Pain and crashes fit together; have a look at our guide to fibromyalgia and sleep.


    Key resources and references

    If you would like to read more or share information with your GP, these are good starting points:

    NICE guideline NG193 on chronic primary pain in over sixteens, which includes fibromyalgia.

    The Royal College of Physicians guidance on diagnosing fibromyalgia.

    The Burgess trial on morning light and stabilising sleep and wake timing in fibromyalgia.

    The DREAM-CP trial led by Galley and colleagues, looking at modified release melatonin in severe chronic pain.

    Recent reviews of CBT-I in people who have both fibromyalgia and insomnia.


    Disclaimer

    This article offers general information about fibromyalgia, sleep and circadian rhythms. It is not a substitute for individual medical advice. If you are experiencing chronic pain, fatigue or other worrying symptoms, please speak with your GP or a relevant specialist. Everyone’s situation is different, and what helps one person may not be right for another.


    Written by Stems From The Gut

    Created by someone living with fibromyalgia, chronic pain and messy gut issues. I write in plain English to help you feel more informed and less alone. You can read more about how we use evidence on the Authors and Medical Stance page.

  • Fibromyalgia and Sleep: Can Fixing Your Sleep Really Help Pain and Exhaustion?

    Fibromyalgia and Sleep: Can Fixing Your Sleep Really Help Pain and Exhaustion?

    If you’re living with fibromyalgia, fibromyalgia sleep can feel like an impossible puzzle. You’re beyond exhausted. Bone-deep, all-the-time exhaustedYet when you finally climb into bed, sleep won’t come. Or it does come, but you wake every hour, or you sleep through the night only to feel like you haven’t slept at all. Meanwhile, the pain keeps humming away in the background, or gets worse the moment you lie down.

    In this guide, we’ll look at fibromyalgia and sleep, why nights can be so broken, and what genuinely helps. If you’re not sure whether your symptoms fit fibromyalgia, start with What Is Fibromyalgia? (And What It Isn’t).

    If you’re living with fibromyalgia and sleep feels like an impossible puzzle, you’re far from alone. Poor sleep is one of the most common and frustrating symptoms people with fibromyalgia face. And it’s not just about feeling tired. Broken sleep can intensify pain, worsen brain fog, and leave you feeling utterly depleted before the day’s even started.

    Quick takeaways

    • Poor sleep can increase pain sensitivity, fatigue, and brain fog in fibromyalgia
    • Fixing sleep” doesn’t cure fibromyalgia — but it can reduce symptom intensity and improve coping
    • The best improvements often come from gentle consistency, not forcing strict routines
    • If you also experience PEM/PESE, pacing and sleep need to work together (not against each other)

    The good news? While there’s no magic cure, there are evidence-informed strategies that can genuinely help. Improving your sleep won’t make fibromyalgia disappear, but it can ease the pain-fatigue-insomnia cycle enough to give you a bit more breathing room. Let’s look at what’s actually going on with fibromyalgia and sleep, and what you can realistically do about it.

    Key takeaways

    • Fibromyalgia doesn’t just cause pain – it also disrupts how your nervous system regulates sleep, leaving many people “tired but wired”.
    • Poor sleep and fibromyalgia pain fuel each other; improving sleep usually won’t cure fibromyalgia, but it can make pain, fatigue and brain fog easier to live with.
    • The strongest evidence supports a regular wake-up time, morning light, and CBT-I (a structured talking therapy for insomnia).
    • Tools like melatonin, light therapy lamps and sleep hygiene tweaks can be helpful adjuncts, ideally used alongside pacing and nervous-system-friendly routines.

    Why can’t I sleep with fibromyalgia?

    Fibromyalgia affects the way your nervous system processes pain signals. In simple terms, your pain “volume” is turned up too high: signals that wouldn’t normally register as painful get amplified, and signals that are painful feel even more intense. This heightened sensitivity doesn’t just affect pain—it affects your entire nervous system, including the systems that regulate sleep.

    Non-restorative sleep and frequent waking

    Many people with fibromyalgia describe their sleep as “light” or “unrefreshing.” You might spend eight hours in bed but wake feeling as though you’ve had three. Research shows that people with fibromyalgia often spend less time in the deeper, restorative stages of sleep. Instead, sleep is fragmented: you wake repeatedly (even if you don’t fully remember it), and your brain doesn’t get the sustained rest it needs to repair and reset.

    This isn’t just “bad sleep”—it’s a feature of how fibromyalgia affects your nervous system. The same heightened sensitivity that amplifies pain signals can also keep your brain in a state of hyperarousal, making it harder to relax into deep sleep.

    The vicious circle: pain, fatigue, and broken sleep

    Here’s where things get particularly frustrating. Poor sleep makes pain worse. When you don’t sleep well, your pain threshold drops, meaning you feel pain more intensely the next day. That increased pain then makes it harder to sleep the following night. Add in the exhaustion (fibromyalgia fatigue is profound and doesn’t respond to a simple early night), and you’re stuck in a cycle that feels impossible to break.

    Brain fog, low mood, and heightened stress responses all feed into this loop as well. It’s no wonder so many people with fibromyalgia feel utterly trapped by their sleep problems.

    Your body clock and fibromyalgia

    Your circadian rhythm—your internal body clock—helps regulate when you feel alert and when you feel sleepy. It’s driven by light exposure, meal times, activity, and routine. When fibromyalgia disrupts your sleep, it can also throw your circadian rhythm out of sync.

    Irregular sleep and wake times, staying in dim indoor light all day (because you’re too exhausted to go out), and crashing into bed at wildly different times can all confuse your body clock. Once your rhythm is disrupted, it becomes even harder to fall asleep at night and wake feeling rested in the morning—even if you’re desperate for rest.

    What actually helps? Evidence-informed strategies for fibromyalgia and sleep

    There’s no single “fix” for fibromyalgia insomnia, but several approaches have good evidence behind them. The aim isn’t perfection—it’s small, sustainable improvements that ease the cycle over time.

    Sleep-wake regularity: your body clock’s best friend

    One of the most helpful things you can do is work with your body clock rather than against it. This means:

    • A consistent wake-up time, even on weekends. Yes, even when you’ve slept terribly. This is hard, but it’s one of the most powerful tools for resetting your circadian rhythm. Your wake-up time anchors your body clock far more than your bedtime does.
    • Morning light exposure as soon as you can manage it. Natural daylight (even on a cloudy day) signals to your brain that it’s daytime, which helps regulate the release of melatonin later in the evening. If getting outside feels impossible, sitting near a window with your morning tea can help. Light therapy lamps are another option, though it’s worth discussing these with your GP first, especially if you have eye problems, take photosensitising medication, or have a history of bipolar or manic episodes.
    • A wind-down routine in the evening. This doesn’t need to be elaborate—20–30 minutes of dimmer lighting, something calming (reading, gentle stretching, breathing exercises), and stepping away from bright screens can signal to your body that sleep is approaching.

    This won’t work overnight, but over a few weeks, many people find their sleep becomes a little more predictable.

    CBT-I: one of the best-supported approaches for chronic insomnia

    Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is a structured, evidence-based approach specifically designed to tackle long-term sleep problems. It’s recommended by NICE (the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) as a first-line treatment for chronic insomnia, including for people living with persistent pain conditions like fibromyalgia.

    CBT-I isn’t about “thinking positive” or forcing yourself to relax. Instead, it focuses on changing the thoughts and behaviours that keep insomnia going. This might include:

    • Stimulus control: retraining your brain to associate bed with sleep (not frustration, scrolling, or lying awake for hours).
    • Sleep restriction (more accurately called “sleep consolidation”): spending less time in bed initially to build up sleep pressure, then gradually expanding your sleep window as your sleep improves. This sounds counterintuitive but can be very effective.
    • Addressing unhelpful thoughts about sleep, such as catastrophising about how awful tomorrow will be if you don’t sleep tonight.

    CBT-I is usually delivered over several weeks by a trained therapist, though online CBT-I programmes (such as Sleepio, available on the NHS in some areas) can also be helpful. It’s not a quick fix, and it requires some effort, but many people with fibromyalgia find it genuinely improves their sleep quality over time.

    Pacing and energy management during the day

    How you manage your energy during the day has a direct impact on your sleep at night. If you push through on a “good” day and do far too much, you’re likely to crash hard afterwards—and that crash often includes worse pain and even more disrupted sleep.

    Pacing means finding a sustainable rhythm of activity and rest that doesn’t tip you into a flare. It’s not about doing nothing; it’s about doing enough, consistently, without overdoing it. Some gentle structure to your day—regular meal times, short rests, a bit of movement within your limits—can also help support your circadian rhythm and make it easier to wind down in the evening.

    There’s no “push through it” here. Pacing is about respecting your body’s limits and working with them, not fighting against them.

    Gentle movement within your limits

    Movement can help with both pain and sleep, but it needs to be the right kind of movement. This isn’t about graded exercise programmes or forcing yourself to hit step targets. For people with fibromyalgia, overdoing exercise often backfires, leaving you in more pain and even more exhausted.

    Instead, think: gentle stretching, short walks, seated exercises, or anything that feels manageable without triggering a flare. Even five or ten minutes of gentle movement during the day can help. Some people find that a bit of movement in the morning supports their body clock, while others prefer a gentle stretch in the evening as part of their wind-down routine.

    The key is listening to your body. If something leaves you feeling worse, pull back.

    Adjuncts and support tools: helpful, but not magic bullets

    Morning light and evening dim lighting

    Alongside a regular wake-up time, getting bright light in the morning and reducing bright light in the evening can help recalibrate your circadian rhythm. You don’t need expensive equipment—natural daylight is best, but if you’re housebound or it’s winter, a light therapy lamp (around 10,000 lux) used for 20–30 minutes in the morning may help. Speak to your GP before starting light therapy, especially if you have eye conditions, take photosensitising medicines, or have a history of bipolar or manic episodes.

    In the evening, dimming the lights and reducing screen time in the hour or two before bed gives your brain a chance to start producing melatonin naturally.

    Melatonin: a short-term adjunct, not a cure

    Melatonin is a hormone that helps regulate your sleep-wake cycle, and some people with fibromyalgia find that a low dose (around 1–3 mg) taken an hour or so before bed helps them fall asleep more easily. Small studies suggest melatonin may also have mild pain-relieving effects in chronic pain conditions, though the evidence is still emerging. Studies in chronic pain, including fibromyalgia, are still small and short term, and in the UK melatonin isn’t usually prescribed specifically for fibromyalgia on the NHS – it’s more of a case-by-case, off-label discussion with your doctor.

    However, melatonin isn’t a cure for fibromyalgia or fibromyalgia insomnia. It’s best used as a short-term tool to help reset your sleep pattern, ideally alongside the behavioural strategies above. It can cause daytime grogginess in some people and may interact with other medications, so it’s important to discuss it with your GP or specialist before trying it.

    Sleep hygiene basics

    You’ve probably heard of sleep hygiene: keeping your bedroom cool, dark, and quiet; avoiding caffeine late in the day; not using your bed for scrolling or working. These things can help, but they’re not usually enough on their own—especially when you’re dealing with fibromyalgia pain at night.

    Still, they’re worth getting right. Small adjustments like blackout curtains, a supportive pillow, or a notebook by the bed (for writing down worries so they’re not spinning in your head at 2 a.m.) can make a difference when combined with the bigger strategies.

    Practical tips you can try: small steps, realistic goals

    If you’re reading this and feeling overwhelmed, start small. Here are a few manageable things you can try:

    1. Pick one wake-up time and stick to it for two weeks, even after a bad night. Set an alarm, get up, and get some light (natural or from a lamp).
    2. Create a simple wind-down routine: 20–30 minutes before bed, dim the lights, put your phone in another room, and do something genuinely calming. Reading, gentle stretching, or listening to an audiobook all work.
    3. Keep a sleep and pain diary for a week or two. Note your bedtime, wake time, how you slept, and your pain levels. Patterns often emerge that can help you spot what’s helping (or hindering).
    4. Pace your daytime activity. Don’t try to “make up for lost time” on good days. Spread tasks out, rest before you’re desperate, and give yourself permission to do less.
    5. Try a “brain dump” before bed: write down anything that’s worrying you or that you need to remember. Getting it out of your head and onto paper can reduce the mental chatter that keeps you awake.
    6. Get outside (or near a window) in the morning, even for five minutes. Your body clock will thank you.
    7. Talk to your GP or a sleep specialist if insomnia is severely affecting your quality of life. CBT-I, referrals to pain management services, or adjustments to your medication may all be options worth exploring.

    Even small improvements in sleep can start to ease the pain-fatigue cycle. It won’t happen overnight, but over weeks and months, many people find that their pain becomes a little more manageable, their energy improves slightly, and the whole picture feels a bit less impossible.

    Bringing it together

    Fibromyalgia and sleep are deeply intertwined. The same nervous system changes that amplify pain also disrupt your ability to get restorative rest, creating a vicious circle that’s exhausting to live with. But while there’s no magic cure, there are evidence-informed strategies that can help.

    Working with your circadian rhythm, exploring CBT-I, pacing your activity, and making small, sustainable changes to your sleep habits can all contribute to breaking the cycle. Adjuncts like morning light, melatonin (if appropriate), and good sleep hygiene can support these bigger strategies, though they’re not enough on their own.

    The goal isn’t perfect sleep—it’s better sleep. And better sleep, even in small increments, can make fibromyalgia a little easier to live with.

    FAQ: Fibromyalgia and sleep

    Why can’t I sleep with fibromyalgia, even when I’m exhausted?
    Fibromyalgia affects your nervous system’s ability to regulate pain, stress, and sleep. Even when you’re exhausted, your brain may be in a state of hyperarousal, making it difficult to relax into deep sleep. Pain at night, heightened sensitivity, and a disrupted circadian rhythm all contribute to this frustrating “tired but wired” feeling.

    Can improving my sleep reduce fibromyalgia pain?
    Yes, to some extent. Better sleep won’t cure fibromyalgia, but it can help reduce pain intensity, improve your pain threshold, and ease other symptoms like fatigue and brain fog. Sleep and pain are closely linked, so working on one often helps the other.

    Is CBT-I effective for fibromyalgia insomnia?
    CBT-I (cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia) has good evidence for treating chronic insomnia, including in people with long-term pain. It won’t work for everyone, and it requires commitment, but many people with fibromyalgia find it improves their sleep quality and reduces the impact of insomnia over time.

    Should I take melatonin for fibromyalgia sleep problems?
    Melatonin can help some people with sleep onset, and there’s early evidence it may have mild pain-relieving effects in chronic pain. However, it’s not a cure and works best as a short-term adjunct alongside behavioural strategies. Always discuss melatonin with your GP first, as it can cause side effects and may interact with other medications.

    Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and is not a substitute for individual medical advice. Always speak to your own doctor or specialist before making changes to your medication, diet, supplements, or activity levels.

    Next read: When you’re ready, learn how bad nights can tip you into crashes in Fibromyalgia Sleep and Flares: How Bad Nights Turn Up Pain and PEM

    Key resources & references

    NHS – Fibromyalgia overview

    NICE guidance on chronic primary pain (NG193)

    NICE guidance on ME/CFS: diagnosis and management (NG206)

    Versus Arthritis – Fibromyalgia

    Fibromyalgia Action UK (FMA UK)


    Written by Stems From The Gut
    Created by someone living with fibromyalgia, chronic pain and messy gut issues. I write in plain English to help you feel more informed and less alone. You can read more about who we are and how we use evidence on the Authors & Medical Stance page.