Reta messing with your sleep?

The afternoon fatigue on Reta in the early weeks is one of the most consistent reports. The narcolepsy feeling front-loads in the first 2-4 weeks then settles significantly. Pinning time affects it: morning injection means the fatigue peak hits daytime; evening pins shift the worst of it closer to sleep. Some find the 10-12h post-injection window is the hardest regardless of timing.
 
HR normalizing with Reta is a known effect - if baseline was athlete-low it should stay once adaptation settles. Sleep disruption is more variable; lighter sleep for the first month or two is common.
 
Sleep disruption in the early weeks on reta settles for most by month 2. Anxiety fades ahead of sleep normalization.
 
The sleep impact from Reta varies considerably - the people who report no change or improvement are likely not running at doses that push the glucagon component hard, since glucagon receptor activation is the pathway most associated with stimulatory side effects. Cortisol and resting heart rate tend to be the more consistent signals of whether glucagon activation is too high for a given person. Starting at the lower end of the dose range and measuring resting HR over the first 3-4 weeks is the cleaner way to calibrate before bumping up. Existing sleep difficulty can mask the Reta contribution, making it harder to isolate - a wearable with a consistent baseline helps.
 
Reta sleep disruption is well reported - elevated cortisol from glucagon agonism and thermogenesis both affect sleep architecture. Most people find it stabilizes at steady state within 4-6 weeks, and evening dosing tends to make it worse than morning.
 
Epitalon and DSIP is the right combination for Reta sleep disruption - they work through the circadian pathway rather than sedation, which holds up better over repeat cycles.
 
The vivid dream phase settles for most people - common early Reta experience, usually evens out after a few weeks. Net positive sleep with some strange dreams along the way is the typical pattern.
 
Early waking and anxiety on Reta can come from cortisol dysregulation - the triple agonism affects the HPA axis in some people. If it persists past the first few weeks, reducing the dose before switching is the usual first step.
 
the Oura ring for overnight tracking is worth the switch if RHR and sleep quality are what you're monitoring on Reta - the ring form factor is more comfortable for extended overnight wear than a watch and the pulse data is more accurate at lower heart rates than most wrist-worn devices. the sleep staging and HRV trend data over several weeks gives you a much cleaner read on how the medication is affecting your overnight baseline than day-to-day feel
 
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