Sleep Disruption in Perimenopause: The Role of DSIP and Recovery Signaling
Introduction
Waking up at night, trouble falling asleep, or feeling unrested—sleep disruption is one of the most reported symptoms during perimenopause.
Research is increasingly focused on how sleep regulation, stress signaling, and recovery cycles change during this stage.
What’s Disrupting Sleep?
Key factors being studied:
- Cortisol rhythm changes
- Circadian rhythm shifts
- Nervous system imbalance
These can lead to:
- Frequent waking
- Light sleep
- Reduced recovery
Why Sleep Matters More Than Ever
Sleep directly impacts:
- Metabolism
- Hormonal balance
- Stress response
Poor sleep can amplify other symptoms.
Where Peptide Research Comes In
DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide)
Studied for:
- Sleep cycle regulation
- Stress-related sleep disruption
- Recovery signaling during sleep
CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin (GH-related signaling)
Explored for:
- Deep sleep phase support
- Recovery-related processes
👉 Research focuses on regulation of sleep cycles, not sedation.
Bottom Line
Sleep disruption during perimenopause is often tied to:
- Stress signaling changes
- Circadian rhythm shifts
- Recovery imbalance
Peptide research is exploring how these systems are regulated.
Disclaimer
Mile High Peptides LLC provides research materials intended for laboratory and educational use only. Not for human consumption.
