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Insomnia disorder — illustrative hero

Insomnia disorder

ICD-10 F51.01

Reviewed by the glpzoom Editorial Team against primary clinical sources — FDA labeling, peer-reviewed trials, and specialty-society guidelines.
Content current as of June 2026; updated when guidance or availability changes.
Last verified by glpzoom Editorial Team against primary sources
~0%
US adults with weekly insomnia symptoms
0-15%
with chronic insomnia disorder
CBT-I
first-line per AASM
~0%
respond to first-line CBT-I

What is insomnia disorder?

Insomnia disorder is persistent difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or non-restorative sleep, with daytime functional impairment, occurring ≥3 nights per week for ≥3 months. Affects 10-15% of US adults chronically. Often secondary to anxiety, depression, pain, or substance use.

What are the symptoms of insomnia disorder?

  • Difficulty falling asleep (sleep-onset insomnia)
  • Frequent awakenings or trouble returning to sleep (sleep-maintenance insomnia)
  • Early-morning awakening before desired wake time
  • Daytime fatigue, irritability, or impaired concentration
  • Symptoms occurring ≥3 nights/week for ≥3 months (chronic threshold)

Who is at risk for insomnia disorder?

  • Mood disorders (depression, anxiety) — bidirectional relationship
  • Female sex (lifetime prevalence ~1.5× men)
  • Age — prevalence rises after 60
  • Shift work and irregular sleep schedules
  • Caffeine, nicotine, alcohol exposure (alcohol fragments sleep architecture)
  • Medications: stimulants, decongestants, some antidepressants, corticosteroids
  • Chronic pain, GERD, restless legs syndrome (treat the underlying driver)

How is insomnia disorder diagnosed?

Clinical, supported by sleep diary 1-2 weeks and validated tools (Insomnia Severity Index). Polysomnography is not routinely needed unless evaluating for sleep apnea or periodic limb movement disorder. Rule out shift-work disorder and circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders.

How is insomnia disorder treated?

First-line: cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) — better long-term outcomes than medications. Pharmacotherapy: low-dose doxepin, melatonin agonists (ramelteon), orexin antagonists (suvorexant, daridorexant) for chronic insomnia. Z-drugs (zolpidem, eszopiclone) for short-term use only. Benzodiazepines avoided due to tolerance and falls risk.

Authority reference: aasm.org

Other conditions

Related topics

Sources

Primary sources cited above. FDA labeling, peer-reviewed trials, and specialty-society guidelines only.

  1. Clinical Practice Guideline for the Pharmacologic Treatment of Chronic Insomnia in Adults · American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2017
  2. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia: A Meta-Analysis · Annals of Internal Medicine, 2015 · PMID 26054060

People also ask

  • Are sleep medications safe long-term?

    Z-drugs (zolpidem, eszopiclone) and benzodiazepines carry tolerance, dependence, and falls risks especially in older adults — AASM guidelines limit them to short-term use. Newer orexin antagonists (suvorexant, daridorexant) and low-dose doxepin appear safer for chronic use but long-term data is still maturing. Non-pharmacologic CBT-I outperforms long-term medication on most outcomes.

  • Does melatonin work for insomnia?

    Melatonin shifts circadian timing — useful for shift work, jet lag, and delayed sleep phase disorder. Effect on chronic insomnia is modest (reduces sleep onset by ~7 minutes vs placebo in meta-analyses). Quality varies widely between OTC supplements; doses on labels often exceed what's clinically useful. Prescription ramelteon is the regulated melatonin agonist.

  • What is CBT-I and where can I get it?

    Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia is a structured 6-8 session program targeting sleep restriction, stimulus control, cognitive restructuring, and relaxation. It outperforms medication on long-term outcomes. Available from sleep psychologists, sleep medicine clinics, and digital programs (Sleepio, Somryst — FDA-cleared as prescription digital therapeutic).

  • Is insomnia caused by depression or vice versa?

    Both. The relationship is bidirectional — insomnia precedes depression in ~40% of cases and follows it in another ~30%. Treating the underlying mood disorder typically improves sleep; treating insomnia in depressed patients improves depression outcomes. Many SSRIs cause insomnia as a side effect during the activation window.

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