10 Things to Hate About Sleep Loss
You know lack of sleep can make you grumpy and foggy.
You may not know what it can do to your sex life, memory, health, looks, and
even ability to lose weight. Here are 10 surprising -- and serious -- effects
of sleep loss.
Sleep deprivation was a factor in some of the biggest
disasters in recent history: the 1979 nuclear accident at Three Mile Island,
the massive Exxon Valdez oil spill, the 1986 nuclear meltdown at Chornobyl, and
others.
But sleep loss is also a big public safety hazard every
day on the road. Drowsiness can slow reaction time as much as driving drunk.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that fatigue is a
cause in 100,000 auto crashes and 1,550 crash-related deaths a year in the U.S.
The problem is greatest among people under 25 years old.
Studies show that sleep loss and poor-quality sleep
also lead to accidents and injuries on the job. In one study, workers who
complained about excessive daytime sleepiness had significantly more work
accidents, particularly repeated work accidents. They also had more sick days
per accident.
Sleep plays a critical role in thinking and learning.
Lack of sleep hurts these cognitive processes in many ways. First, it impairs
attention, alertness, concentration, reasoning, and problem-solving. This makes
it more difficult to learn efficiently.
Second, during the night, various sleep cycles play a
role in “consolidating” memories in the mind. If you don’t get enough sleep,
you won’t be able to remember what you learned and experienced during the day.
Sleep disorders and chronic sleep loss can put you at
risk for:
Heart disease
Heart attack
Heart failure
Irregular heartbeat
High blood pressure stroke
Diabetes
According to some estimates, 90% of people with
insomnia -- a sleep disorder characterized by trouble falling and staying
asleep -- also have another health condition.
For men with sleep apnea, a respiratory problem that
interrupts sleep, there may be another factor in the sexual slump. A study
published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism in 2002
suggests that many men with sleep apnea also have low testosterone levels. In
the study, nearly half of the men who suffered from severe sleep apnea also
secreted abnormally low levels of testosterone during the night
The most common sleep disorder, insomnia, has the
strongest link to depression. In a 2007 study of 10,000 people, those with
insomnia were five times as likely to develop depression as those without. Insomnia is often one of the first symptoms of depression.
insomniathe and depression feed on each other. Sleep loss
often aggravates the symptoms of depression, and depression can make it more
difficult to fall asleep. On the positive side, treating sleep problems can
help depression and its symptoms, and vice versa.
When you don’t get enough sleep, your body releases
more of the stress hormone cortisol. In excess amounts, cortisol can break down
skin collagen, the protein that keeps skin smooth and elastic.
Sleep loss also causes the body to release too little
human growth hormone. When we’re young, human growth hormone promotes growth.
As we age, it helps increase muscle mass, thicken skin, and strengthen bones.
“It’s during deep sleep -- what we call slow-wave sleep
-- that growth hormone is released,” says sleep expert Phil Gehrman, PhD. “It
seems to be part of normal tissue repair -- patching the wear and tear of the
day.”
In 2009, American and French researchers determined
that brain events called “sharp wave ripples” are responsible for consolidating
memory. The ripples also transfer learned information from the hippocampus to
the
neocortex of the brain, where long-term memories are
stored. Sharp wave ripples occur mostly during the deepest levels of sleep.
8.
Losing Sleep Can Make You Gain Weight
When it comes to body weight, it may be that if you
snooze, you lose. Lack of sleep seems to be related to an increase in hunger
and appetite, and possibly to obesity. According to a 2004 study, people who
sleep less than six hours a day were almost 30 percent more likely to become
obese than those who slept seven to nine hours.
Recent research has focused on the link between sleep
and the peptides that regulate appetite. “Ghrelin stimulates hunger and leptin
signals satiety to the brain and suppresses appetite,” says Siebern. “Shortened
sleep time is associated with decreases in leptin and elevations in ghrelin.”
Not only does sleep loss appear to stimulate appetite.
It also stimulates cravings for high-fat, high-carbohydrate foods. Ongoing
studies are considering whether adequate sleep should be a standard part of
weight loss programs.
Sleep-deprived people seem to be especially prone to
poor judgment when it comes to assessing what lack of sleep is doing to them.
In our increasingly fast-paced world, functioning on less sleep has become a
kind of badge of honor. But sleep specialists say if
you think you’re doing fine on less sleep, you’re probably wrong. And if you
work in a profession where it’s important to be able to judge your level of
functioning, this can be a big problem.
“Studies show that over time, people who are getting
six hours of sleep, instead of seven or eight, begin to feel that they’ve
adapted to that sleep deprivation -- they’ve gotten used to it,” Gehrman says.
“But if you look at how they do on tests of mental alertness and
performance, they continue to go downhill. So there’s a point in sleep
deprivation when we lose touch with how impaired we are.”
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