Why Can't You Clench Your Fist Right After Waking Up?
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- Changes In Your Body As You Sleep
- Low Body Temperature And Muscle Stiffness
- Lack Of Blood Flow And Stiff Joints
- In Conclusion, What Can You Do To Avoid This?
You struggle to effortlessly make a fist for similar reason as why you feel stiff after sitting for too long: inactivity. Low blood pressure, lack of muscle movement and low core body temperature during sleep can make the joints stiff.
Balling up your palm and making a fist is easy enough, isn’t it? But try doing that right after you wake up from a deep sleep. It’s a simple enough task, yet it is tough to complete immediately after pulling out of slumber. Why is that?
Note: This is not a universal thing. Not everyone experiences difficulty clenching their palms into a fist right after waking up. Moreover, this little symptom may be a sign of a more serious condition that requires medical attention.
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Why Can’t You Clench Your Fist Right After Waking Up?Changes In Your Body As You Sleep
Your body is not the same when you sleep as when you are awake. There are two phases of sleep: Non-rapid eye movement, or NREM, and rapid eye movement, or REM. You progress through different cycles of NREM and REM, with about 70 to 80% of total sleep being NREM and the rest being REM sleep.
You first enter NREM sleep, during which your muscles become increasingly “loose” and limp, your eyes get droopy, and you drift off into an unconscious space. As you drift off into deeper sleep, entering the later stages of NREM, your muscles lose even more of their tone. Muscle tone is nothing but how much the muscles can actively contract. In low muscle tone, the muscles are stretched out and relaxed. When you’re awake, muscles in the body remain contracted, even if you just lay on the couch. The act of laying comfortably requires your muscles to contract to maintain that posture.
In addition to lying limp, your core body temperature also drops.
The most obvious change is that you’re lying limp. As you enter deeper stages of sleep, your muscles relax and become unmoving (which is why most of us are not living out our dreams). For the most part, we lay in the same position that we slept in, only turning and twisting occasionally.
Low Body Temperature And Muscle Stiffness
When it’s time to go to bed, our body will begin to cool itself down. Most mammals have such a temperature shift before they sleep. This is one reason we love to snuggle in blankets when we sleep or find nests and huddle for rats, dogs, and cats; it keeps us warm as our bodies cool down from the inside. It might also be why we fall asleep easier when snuggly tucked during the winters than during the sweltering heat of the summers when our bodies find it difficult to cool off enough.
Our internal temperature drops by almost 2 degrees C. This might not sound like much, but for your muscles and joints, it is an impactful drop.

Heat makes muscles more flexible. It’s easier for you to touch your toes when your core temperature is warmer, such as in the evening or after some cardio, than it is early in the morning. Heat causes certain metabolic changes in the muscle that make it easier for the muscle to engage in agile movement.
So far, there is little direct causation that this also contributes to the feeling of stiffness after you wake up. But it is worth considering.
Lack Of Blood Flow And Stiff Joints
You struggle to effortlessly make a fist for a similar reason as why you feel stiff after sitting for too long: inactivity.
Not using your muscles, coupled with lower blood pressure, affects joint flexibility.
Your joints, the connection between two bones, are the key to moving your body uninhibited.
Between two bones is a thick fluid called synovial fluid. The fluid helps lubricate the joint and prevents friction between the bones, just like one would oil a creaking door hinge. But with low blood flow (from the low heart rate and immobility), the cartilage that covers the bones absorbs the synovial fluid. This results in the fluid getting thicker, contributing to stiffness.
Good blood flow recycles the synovial fluid. Blood brings with it plasma, oxygen, and nutrients. It also picks up any waste molecules and leads to macromolecules making their way into the lymphatic system.
The lymphatic system, a secondary circulatory that carries clear lymph fluid, flows throughout the body, picking up waste molecules. Its flow depends on blood pressure
and muscle movement. As you lay limp, the lymph accumulates, which is why you appear a little puffy when you wake up. It is also this lack of lymph circulation that leads to creaky joints.
In Conclusion, What Can You Do To Avoid This?
For one, stretching and exercising regularly will increase the maximum you can stretch even when your body is “cold.” Stretching regularly trains not only the muscles to stretch more but also the nervous system linked to the muscles. When you wake up, even if you feel a little stiff, you’ll still have a decent range of motion.
Hydration is also important. Drinking enough water will improve joint health.
Your joints can also become stiff if you’re sleep-deprived. Getting less sleep than your body requires causes inflammation and dehydration, among other symptoms. Both inflammation and dehydration (and the electrolyte imbalance that results from it) will impact your joints and muscles, impacting the range of motion you can achieve with it.
But, if it worsens over time, it could be a symptom of an underlying medical condition, such as rheumatoid arthritis or Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome.
References (click to expand)- 26.3 Electrolyte Balance – Anatomy & Physiology.
- Physiology of Sleep - StatPearls.
- Harding, E. C., Franks, N. P., & Wisden, W. (2019, April 24). The Temperature Dependence of Sleep. Frontiers in Neuroscience. Frontiers Media SA.
- Lee, H. (2013). Effect of heat and cold on tendon flexibility and force to flex the human knee. Medical Science Monitor. International Scientific Information, Inc.
- Dehydration and Joint Pain: How Your Hydration is ....
- Cao, M., Ong, M. T. Y., Yung, P. S. H., Tuan, R. S., & Jiang, Y. (2022, September). Role of synovial lymphatic function in osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage. Elsevier BV.
- Sleep and Body Fluids : International Journal of Nutrition ....
AshishAshish is a Science graduate (Bachelor of Science) from Punjabi University (India). He spearheads the content and editorial wing of ScienceABC and manages its official Youtube channel. He’s a Harry Potter fan and tries, in vain, to use spells and charms (Accio! [insert object name]) in real life to get things done. He totally gets why JRR Tolkien would create, from scratch, a language spoken by elves, and tries to bring the same passion in everything he does. A big admirer of Richard Feynman and Nikola Tesla, he obsesses over how thoroughly science dictates every aspect of life… in this universe, at least.
Tags: Heart, Medicine, Muscle, Muscle contraction, Nerve, Potassium Related Posts
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