Article

February 13, 2026

time

-min

read

Sleep

Can Vagus Nerve Stimulation Improve Sleep?

Research suggests that if your sleep troubles are linked to stress and nervous system imbalance then non-invasive VNS may help. Here’s what the science says.

Woman resting comfortably in bed with her dog, representing calm and restorative sleep.

If you’ve been searching for new ways to get better slumber, you may have heard of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) and, because you’ve tried a lot of things in vain, dismissed it.

But non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) is proving helpful for certain types of sleep disturbance. It’s not a universal cure, though. Details matter.

Here’s what the science says.

Why the vagus nerve affects sleep

The vagus nerve is the main arm of your parasympathetic nervous system — the system responsible for rest, recovery, and downregulation. It helps you shift out of fight-or-flight, slows your heart rate, reduces alertness and mental overactivity, and stabilizes breathing — all things you need to get good sleep.

If your nervous system stays subtly activated at night, if you go to bed in even a low-grade fight-or-flight state, you may feel that familiar tired-but-wired feeling.

One of the vagus nerve’s primary functions is to keep you coming back to rest-and-digest all through the day, especially before bed.

By stimulating the vagus nerve, you can enhance your body’s natural ability to find rest.

While vagus nerve stimulation has been studied for decades, the focus for a long time was on implanted stimulators. More recently, non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (nVNS) — stimulation that happens through the skin — is growing in popularity as a promising tool to improve sleep quality.

Let’s explore what research shows about nVNS for sleep.

taVNS for post-stroke insomnia

One published case study using transcutaneous auricular VNS (taVNS) treated a patient with post-stroke insomnia.

After two weeks of receiving stimulation twice a day, not only did the patient’s sleep improve significantly but the patient was still getting better sleep at their three-month follow-up.

Brain imaging (fMRI) showed decreased activity in the default mode network (DMN) — a brain network often hyperactive in insomnia and rumination.

While this was only a single case, it supports the idea that vagus nerve stimulation may calm overactive brain networks linked to poor sleep.

Migraine-related sleep disturbance

People with migraines report more trouble sleeping than others.

A prospective observational study found that nVNS helped:

  • Prevent migraines
  • Treat acute attacks
  • Improve migraine-associated sleep disturbance

This suggests vagus nerve stimulation may be particularly helpful when sleep issues are tied to nervous system dysregulation.

Ear stimulation and insomnia

Cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES) — low-intensity electrical stimulation applied to the earlobes — is FDA-approved for insomnia, anxiety, and depression.

Although the earlobe has limited vagal innervation, brain scans show CES produces activation patterns similar to vagus nerve stimulation. The concha, cymba concha, and tragus are innervated by sensory branches of the vagus nerve.

These sensory nerve fibers carry the electrical signals of the stimulation into the brain, particularly the nucleus ambiguus, dorsal motor nucleus, hypothalamus, amygdala, and cortex. The hypothalamus controls your shifting between sleep and wakefulness.

The brain may be more receptive during sleep

Animal research shows that the brain’s response to vagus nerve stimulation changes across sleep stages.

Vagal-evoked brain responses are largest during non-REM sleep, suggesting the brain may be especially receptive to vagal input during deeper sleep phases.

We also know that vagal regulation differs across sleep states in newborns, highlighting the vagus nerve’s natural role in sleep architecture.

Are there risks?

Non-invasive VNS is generally considered safe.

However, implanted VNS devices (used for epilepsy and depression) have been associated with sleep-disordered breathing, increased obstructive apnea, snoring, and rare reports of insomnia.

These effects likely relate to stimulation intensity and influence on upper airway muscles.

Importantly, these findings do not automatically apply to modern non-invasive devices like your yōjō — but they do show that stimulation parameters matter.

So, can vagus nerve help me sleep?

Sleep isn’t just about melatonin levels. It’s about nervous system regulation.

Because the vagus nerve influences heart rate, inflammation, breathing, and brain network activity, stimulating it may help the body shift into a recovery state more effectively, beckoning sleep.

For people whose sleepless nights feel like a stress-response problem, vagal modulation could represent an important emerging option.

Up next

View All
Two older adults jogging together along a tree-lined path on a sunny day.
Recovery

Article

March 13, 2026

time

-min

read

Can Vagus Nerve Stimulation Help People Get More Exercise?

What if recovery, not effort, is the real bottleneck in your fitness routine? New research suggests vagus nerve stimulation may reduce fatigue, ease soreness, and help your body bounce back faster after workouts.

Key Takeaways

  • Recovery drives long-term fitness. Consistency matters more than single-session performance and influences recovery between workouts.
  • Chronic stress can slow recovery. A constantly active stress response may increase inflammation and fatigue and delay tissue repair.
  • The vagus nerve regulates recovery. As a key part of the parasympathetic nervous system, it helps shift the body into a rest-and-repair state.
  • Vagus nerve stimulation may improve post-workout recovery. Studies show it can reduce muscle pain, fatigue, and post-exercise sympathetic overactivity.

If you're trying to build a consistent exercise habit, you already know the hardest part is showing up again and again, when your legs are still heavy from the last session, your shoulders ache when you lift your arms, and every warm-up rep feels like a negotiation with your body.

But what if you could recover just a little faster?

Recovery is central to a healthy exercise routine, but it is often limited by physiological, nutritional, and lifestyle factors. One of the most important is the stress-inflammation cycle.

After a tough workout, your body launches an acute stress-inflammation response. Microscopic damage occurs in your muscle fibers, and your immune system moves in to clean up the damaged tissue. This triggers a highly regulated, self-limiting process that ultimately leads to muscle regeneration. In other words, the soreness you feel the next day is part of the repair process that makes your muscles stronger.

But this system only works well if the stress response switches off afterward.

If the stress-inflammation cycle stays active, because of poor sleep, chronic stress, overtraining, or inadequate nutrition, your body struggles to shift into its rest-and-recovery mode. Instead of calming down after exercise, your stress response keeps running in the background.

Your stress hormones become chronically dysregulated, and cortisol levels remain elevated long after the workout ends. Over time, glucocorticoid receptor resistance can develop, meaning cortisol no longer triggers the anti-inflammatory response it is supposed to produce.

The result is familiar to many people who exercise regularly: soreness that lingers for days, workouts that feel harder than they should, and fatigue that builds week after week.

Inflammation rises, tissue repair slows, energy drops, and performance begins to stall.

Researchers have been studying whether vagus nerve stimulation can interrupt this cycle to reduce post-exercise fatigue, accelerating recovery, and even making it easier to return for the next workout. The findings are nuanced, but more promising than you might expect.

Vagus nerve stimulation crash course

The vagus nerve is the longest cranial nerve in the body, running from the brainstem down through the heart, lungs, and digestive tract. It's a central highway of the parasympathetic nervous system, the rest-and-digest branch that counterbalances the stress response.

Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) involves activating this nerve either through implanted devices or, increasingly, through non-invasive methods like transcutaneous auricular VNS (taVNS), which delivers gentle electrical pulses to the outer ear. No surgery required.

Does VNS actually improve performance?

Let's get the most common question out of the way first: no, VNS won't make you faster or stronger in a single session.

In a study of 90 healthy young adults performing a 30-minute maximum-effort cycling test, taVNS did not increase total distance cycled. Raw athletic output depends more on training, motivation, and conditioning than on nerve stimulation.

But performance during a workout is only part of the equation and arguably not the most important part for long-term fitness.

Long-term fitness is built through consistency, and consistency depends on how well you recover between workouts.

Here's where VNS research gets genuinely interesting.

Reduced muscle pain and fatigue

In a study where participants received bilateral VNS after exercise, they reported significantly less muscle pain and lower perceived fatigue compared to control groups.

If post-workout soreness is what keeps you off the treadmill for days at a time, this has real practical value.

Faster nervous system recovery

During exercise, your sympathetic nervous system (fight-or-flight) dominates, and rightfully so. The problem is that staying in that heightened state after your workout delays recovery and disrupts sleep.

VNS has been shown to:

Crucially, this shift happens without dangerous cardiovascular side effects.

Lower lactic acid levels

Participants in the pain and fatigue study who received bilateral VNS after exercise showed significantly lower blood lactic acid levels.

Lactic acid is a key driver of that heavy, burning sensation in your muscles during and after intense effort. Lower levels post-workout suggest more efficient anaerobic metabolism and improved parasympathetic recovery, which may translate into less next-day sluggishness and stiffness.

Can VNS help you want to exercise?

This is perhaps the most intriguing area of current research.

Emerging evidence suggests VNS may influence motivation, reward processing, and mood. In some studies, non-invasive VNS boosted motivation to work for rewards and improved mood recovery after exertion, particularly in people who started with lower baseline mood or energy.

VNS won't override your reluctance to exercise entirely, but it may reduce the psychological friction that stops you from lacing up your shoes some days.

Recovery optimizer, not performance enhancer

Vagus nerve stimulation won’t make you stronger, faster, or more flexible. But, by speeding recovery, reducing pain, and boosting motivation, VNS may make the next workout more likely.

In the long game of fitness, recovery is what determines sustainability.

Did you know?

Exercise itself stimulates the vagus nerve. VNS doesn't replace physical activity. It supports it.

Hand holding a smartwatch displaying heart rate data and waveform, illustrating heart rate monitoring and heart rate variability tracking.
Heart rate variability

Article

March 6, 2026

time

-min

read

What Is Heart Rate Variability (HRV) and How Does the Vagus Nerve Control It?

Learn what heart rate variability (HRV) is, how the vagus nerve controls it, and the science-backed strategies to improve it.

Key Takeaways

  • HRV is the beat-to-beat variation in your heart rate, reflecting the health of your autonomic nervous system.
  • The vagus nerve is the primary controller of beat-to-beat HRV through its parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) signaling.
  • Higher vagal tone = higher HRV, and vagal tone is trainable.
  • Studies show ear-based vagal nerve stimulation can improve HRV.
  • Top strategies to improve HRV include slow breathing, aerobic exercise, cold exposure, nVNS, meditation, and sleep optimization.
  • Track your HRV trend over time, not just a single reading.


While we all intuitively know that health metrics are not the same as health, we do, nevertheless, watch them, unpack them, and try to improve them.

One such metric, heart rate variability (HRV), has become one of the most-tracked biomarkers among athletes, longevity researchers, and wellness enthusiasts alike. If you wear a tracker, you’ll recognize these three letters: HRV. You may even have heard about its links to vagus nerve health.

But what is HRV exactly, and what does it have to do with the vagus nerve?

What is heart rate variability (HRV)?

HRV might sound complex, but it isn’t. Instead of beating like a metronome, your heart naturally varies the time between each beat. There are tiny fluctuations in the "lub-dub" of your heart. These variations, measured in milliseconds and recorded with wearables like WHOOP, Oura Ring, Apple Watch, or clinical-grade ECGs, constitute heart rate variability (HRV) readings.

Heart rate counts beats per minute; HRV measures the variations in time between beats.

Why does HRV matter?

A healthy heart isn't perfectly regular; it's adaptable. HRV tells you just how adaptable your heart is, how resilient it is. And, by extension, HRV also shows how well your nervous system is functioning, opening a window into your body’s ability to handle and bounce back from stress.

A higher HRV generally signals that your nervous system is flexible and adaptive, able to switch smoothly between stress and relaxation. A lower HRV, by contrast, often indicates stress, poor recovery, illness, or an overworked nervous system.

Research has linked HRV to:

  • Cardiovascular health: low HRV can indicate cardiac events
  • Mental health: reduced HRV is associated with anxiety, depression, and PTSD
  • Athletic performance and recovery: elite athletes use HRV to time their training loads
  • Longevity: higher HRV correlates with lower all-cause mortality
  • Cognitive function: better HRV is associated with improved focus and decision-making

What is a good HRV?

HRV is highly individual. It varies by age, fitness level, genetics, sex, and measurement method. That said, despite the lack of universal ranges, some trends have emerged:

More important than your absolute number is your personal baseline trend. Are you improving over weeks and months? That's what matters.

How the vagus nerve controls HRV

To understand HRV, you need to understand the vagus nerve — the longest cranial nerve in the human body, running from the brainstem all the way down to your gut, heart, and lungs.

The vagus nerve is the primary highway of the parasympathetic nervous system (your rest-and-digest mode). It carries signals that slow the heart rate, lower blood pressure, reduce inflammation, and promote digestion and repair.

The vagus nerve controls your heart rate through a precise, rapid-fire chemical process. When activated, it releases a neurotransmitter called acetylcholine. This binds to receptors and triggers changes in cells, slowing your heartbeat.

What makes this remarkable is how fast it happens.

Unlike the sympathetic nervous system, which takes several seconds to influence heart rate, vagal signals act in under one second.

This near-instantaneous response is what allows the vagus nerve to make precise, beat-to-beat adjustments.

It is those vagal adjustments that are measured as HRV.

When the vagus nerve is active and healthy, it continuously modulates your heart rate in response to your breath, thoughts, movement, and environment. This modulation is HRV.

What is vagal tone?

Vagal tone refers to the baseline level of activity in your vagus nerve.

High vagal tone = efficient parasympathetic regulation = higher HRV.

Low vagal tone = reduced parasympathetic control, with greater sympathetic (fight-or-flight) influence = suppressed HRV.

Poor vagal tone has been linked to:

  • Chronic inflammation
  • Digestive issues (IBS, functional dyspepsia)
  • Depression and anxiety
  • Fatigue and poor sleep quality
  • Slower recovery from illness or exercise

Vagal tone is not fixed. You can improve your vagus nerve's responsiveness — and your HRV along with it — through deliberate, evidence-based practices.

How to improve heart rate variability: evidence-based strategies

Here are the most evidence-supported methods to improve HRV by strengthening vagus nerve tone.

Practice slow breathing

Slow breathing activates the vagus nerve and produces large HRV improvements. You can follow breathwork activities on the yōjō app to complement your daily vagus nerve stimulation.

Try this: Inhale for 4 seconds, hold for 4, exhale for 4, and hold for 4. Do this for 5 minutes daily. This technique is often called "box breathing."

Cold exposure

Splashing cold water on your face, taking a cold shower, or submerging in cold water triggers the diving reflex, which activates the vagus nerve and increases parasympathetic tone. Even 30 seconds of exposure to cold water has been shown to affect HRV.

Regular aerobic exercise

Consistent cardio — running, cycling, swimming — is the single most powerful long-term intervention for improving HRV.

Exercise trains the heart and autonomic nervous system to handle stress more efficiently, building baseline vagal tone over months and years.

Tip: Track your HRV after hard training sessions. A significant HRV drop signals you need more recovery time — use it as your body's readiness signal.

Meditation and mindfulness

Studies show that regular meditators have higher resting HRV compared to non-meditators. Even an 8-week mindfulness program has been shown to shift autonomic balance toward greater parasympathetic dominance.

Transauricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS)

Several studies show that transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) can improve heart rate variability (HRV), a key marker of the nervous system's ability to regulate stress.

Research consistently finds that taVNS increases high-frequency (HF) power and RMSSD, two HRV measures strongly linked to vagus nerve activity and parasympathetic control of the heart.

These changes indicate a shift in the nervous system from sympathetic fight-or-flight dominance and toward parasympathetic recovery mode.

The effects are often most pronounced in people with higher baseline nervous system stress, such as older adults or individuals with cardiovascular conditions.

Sleep quality and consistency

Your HRV recovers during sleep, specifically during slow-wave and REM stages. Poor sleep hygiene chronically suppresses vagal tone and HRV. Prioritizing 7–9 hours of quality sleep, consistent sleep timing, and a cool, dark room are basic but powerful HRV levers.

Excessive alcohol consumption

Alcohol acutely suppresses HRV within hours of consumption.

Even moderate alcohol the night before can reduce next-morning HRV by 28-33% in some individuals.

The gut-vagus connection is bidirectional: what damages or disrupts your gut microbiome alters your vagal signaling.

Humming, singing, and gargling

These might sound unusual, but they work.

The vagus nerve innervates the muscles of the larynx and pharynx. Humming, chanting, singing, or gargling activates these muscles and sends afferent (upward) signals along the vagus nerve, increasing parasympathetic tone.

HRV as a window into your nervous system

HRV is more than a fitness metric. It's a real-time readout of how well your nervous system is regulating itself, how resilient your body is to physical and psychological stress.

The vagus nerve is the biological infrastructure behind that resilience.

By deliberately training vagal tone through breathing, movement, cold exposure, and mindfulness, you're not just chasing a number on a dashboard — you're rewiring your autonomic nervous system toward greater health and adaptability.

In a world that chronically pushes us toward sympathetic overdrive (stress, screens, poor sleep, inflammation), improving your HRV through vagal stimulation is one of the most powerful evidence-backed things you can do for long-term health.

Black-and-white photo of two hands passing a teal baton, with electric sparks radiating from the point of contact against a mint-green background.
VNS

Article

February 27, 2026

time

-min

read

What Is Vagus Nerve Stimulation and How Does it Work?

Vagus nerve stimulation is growing in popularity on social media and the wider well-being world, but is it just another case of well-marketed wishful thinking? Is there substance behind the hype?

Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a medical treatment that uses mild electrical pulses to stimulate the vagus nerve — one of the most important communication pathways in the body.

The vagus nerve begins in the brainstem (the medulla oblongata) and travels down through the neck into the chest and abdomen. Along the way, it connects to the heart, lungs, digestive organs, and immune system.

It is the body’s main “homeostasis nerve.”

Roughly 80% of its fibers are afferent, meaning they carry sensory information from the body up to the brain. The remaining fibers are efferent, sending regulatory signals from the brain back down into the organs.

It is a two-way highway between your brain and body.

By stimulating that vagus nerve, you can influence brain activity, calm the nervous system, and regulate inflammation.

The two types of vagus nerve stimulation

There are two types of vagus nerve stimulation, invasive and non-invasive.

Invasive VNS (iVNS)

This is the original surgical approach approved by the FDA for the treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy in 1988.

  • A pulse generator is implanted under the skin in the chest.
  • A wire is wrapped around the left vagus nerve in the neck.
  • The device sends automatic electrical pulses throughout the day.
  • Doctors program it externally.
  • Patients can trigger extra stimulation with a magnet.

While effective, it requires surgery and carries surgical risks.

Non-invasive VNS (nVNS)

Newer devices stimulate the vagus nerve through the skin, without surgery.

There are two main forms:

  • Cervical VNS (tcVNS) is usually a handheld device placed on the side of the neck. It delivers short bursts of stimulation and is often used for migraine and cluster headaches.
  • Auricular VNS (taVNS) stimulates the vagus nerve through its branches in the ear. A small earpiece or clip is placed on the tragus, cymba concha, and cavum concha, producing a mild tingling sensation. This form of nVNS is highly effective because the vagus nerve’s branches are close to the surface of the skin.

Non-invasive devices are typically used at home and do not require anesthesia.

Studies suggest nVNS can be as effective as implanted VNS for many conditions — without surgery.

It is:

  • Safe
  • Well tolerated
  • Drug-free
  • Flexible
  • Affordable
  • Free of known drug interactions

There are no strict limits on daily stimulation sessions.

How vagus nerve stimulation works

VNS works by delivering mild electrical impulses to the vagus nerve. These signals travel up to the brainstem and then spread to other important brain regions involved in mood, stress, pain, and healing.

When stimulated, the vagus nerve can trigger several important changes:

Chemical shifts in the brain

VNS increases the release of key neurotransmitters such as:

These changes help regulate mood, reduce anxiety, and stabilize abnormal brain signaling.

Brain rewiring (neuroplasticity)

VNS promotes neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to reorganize and form new connections. This is especially helpful in conditions like stroke rehabilitation and depression.

It can also quiet overactive “fear centers” in the brain, such as the amygdala.

Autonomic nervous system balance

The vagus nerve is a key part of the parasympathetic nervous system, often called the rest-and-digest system.

Stimulating it helps engage what researchers call the vagal brake, which:

  • Slows heart rate
  • Reduces fight-or-flight responses
  • Promotes calm and recovery

Inflammation control

VNS activates the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway, a built-in reflex that signals the immune system to reduce the production of inflammatory chemicals.

This is one reason why researchers are studying VNS for autoimmune and inflammatory conditions.

What does vagus nerve stimulation feel like?

For non-invasive ear-based devices, most people feel a mild tingling or gentle buzzing. Cervical stimulation is similar but can also cause facial muscle twitching.

nVNS should not be painful at all.

Implanted devices may cause temporary hoarseness during stimulation.

The future of vagus nerve stimulation

VNS is already approved for:

  • Drug-resistant epilepsy
  • Treatment-resistant depression
  • Migraines and cluster headaches
  • Stroke rehabilitation
  • Rheumatoid arthritis

It is being actively studied for:

  • Anxiety
  • Chronic pain
  • Insomnia
  • Parkinson’s disease
  • Alzheimer’s disease
  • Autoimmune disorders
  • Post-viral syndromes

Research is still evolving, but one thing is clear:

Vagus nerve stimulation represents a shift in medicine, away from symptom suppression and toward neuromodulation and homeostasis, modern tech working with the body’s ancient wiring.