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Midlife Insomnia, Perimenopause & Heart Risk: Why Sleep Changes After 40

Midlife Insomnia, Perimenopause & Heart Risk: Why Sleep Changes After 40

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When was the last time you woke up tired and told yourself it was normal?Not sick. Not burned out. Just… tired.For many women over 40, exhaustion quietly becomes part of everyday life. We normalize fragmented sleep, middle-of-the-night wakeups, and mornings that never quite feel restorative. But what if sleep isn’t just a lifestyle issue?What if it’s a signal?In this solo episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz—cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience—explores the science behind midlife insomnia, hormonal shifts, and cardiovascular risk.March is National Sleep Awareness Month, and the research is clear: we are living through a global sleep crisis. According to the ResMed Global Sleep Survey (2025) of more than 30,000 people across 13 countries:• 7 out of 10 adults struggle with sleep • Nearly three nights per week are unsatisfactory • 22% of people simply “live with it” • 71% of workers have called in sick due to poor sleepBut the story becomes more complex—and more concerning—when we look at midlife.Women between 40 and 60 consistently report worse sleep than men, particularly during perimenopause and menopause, when hormonal changes affect nearly every system involved in sleep regulation.This episode explores why sleep disruption during midlife is not simply inconvenient. It is neurological, metabolic, and cardiovascular.And for many women, it is misunderstood.Episode OverviewSleep is often framed as a soft wellness topic—something associated with bedtime routines, herbal tea, or productivity hacks.But the research tells a different story.A growing body of literature—from JAMA Network Open, Circulation, and NIH-funded studies—demonstrates that insufficient sleep is associated with increased risks of:• cardiovascular disease • stroke • type 2 diabetes • hypertension • obesity • mood disorders • cognitive declineA major JAMA Network Open cohort study found that chronic sleep deprivation is associated with a 29% increase in mortality risk.Not fatigue.Mortality.In this conversation, Rosemarie explains why midlife women are uniquely affected, examining the hormonal changes that reshape sleep architecture and increase vulnerability to conditions like obstructive sleep apnea, insomnia, and circadian rhythm disruption.Drawing on her clinical background and research insights, she reframes sleep not as a lifestyle luxury—but as a critical pillar of cardiovascular and neurological health.What You’ll Learn in This Episode• Why the world is experiencing a documented global sleep crisis • How estrogen and progesterone influence sleep architecture • Why perimenopause increases insomnia and nighttime awakenings • The connection between sleep deprivation and cardiovascular disease • Why sleep apnea risk rises in postmenopausal women • How REM sleep disruption affects memory, mood, and brain health • The role of melatonin, cortisol, and circadian rhythm changes in midlife • Why poor sleep may accelerate brain aging according to the CARDIA study • How sleep disruption affects relationships and emotional regulation • Evidence-based strategies midlife women can implement to improve sleepMidlife TakeawayFor decades, many of us believed functioning on four or five hours of sleep was a sign of resilience.Midlife reveals the truth.Sleep is not a luxury—it is a biological necessity that protects the heart, brain, and nervous system.As hormonal transitions reshape physiology, the body becomes less tolerant of chronic sleep deprivation. What once seemed manageable can begin to affect mood, cognition, metabolism, and cardiovascular health.Understanding these shifts allows women to respond intelligently—not with frustration, but with strategy.Because midlife isn’t fragile.It’s responsive.And when we protect sleep, we protect long-term health.References & ResearchResMed Global Sleep Survey (2025) JAMA Network Open – Sleep deprivation and mortality risk National Institute on Aging (NIH) research on sleep and cardiovascular disease American Heart Association – Life’s Essential 8 CARDIA Study – Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults PubMed – “The Global Problem of Insufficient Sleep and Its Public Health Implications” Circulation – Sleep and cardiovascular outcomes in midlife womenContinue the ConversationIf this episode resonated, consider sharing it with someone navigating midlife health transitions.Second Opinion is now heard in over 25 countries worldwide, and the goal remains the same: thoughtful, credible conversations about health, longevity, and reinvention.And if you’re looking to become a more informed healthcare consumer, visit:https://rosemarieb.comDownload the complimentary resource:Midlife Minute Luxe Guide to Selecting Your Ideal Healthcare ProviderIf you enjoy the show, please follow, share, and leave a review. It helps more people discover the ...
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