Seven To Eight Hours For Longevity: Sleep
Seven To Eight Hours For Longevity: Sleep
their strength and endurance. But recent scientific studies show that a
lack of sleep causes many significant changes in the body and
increases your risk for serious health concerns such as obesity, disease,
and even early death.
Sleep is an important function for many reasons. When you sleep, your
brain signals your body to release hormones and compounds that help:
LIVE LONGER
Researchers also found that people who reduced their sleep time from
seven hours to five hours or less had 1.7 times the risk of death from all
causes.
WEIGHT LOSS
Sleep helps manage your appetite
Poor sleep habits can increase the bodys energy needs. At night,
movement and need for calories is reduced. But when you are sleep-
deprived, your brain will release chemicals to signal hunger. This can
lead to eating more, exercising less, and gaining weight.
IMMUNE SYSTEM
BETTER MEMORY
Its important to get seven to eight hours of sleep so that you can
experience all the sleep stages. No one stage is responsible for
memory and learning. Two stages (rapid eye movement and slow wave
sleep) contribute to:
creative thinking
procedural memory
long-term memories
memory processing
RISKS OF NO SLEEP
diabetes
heart disease
obesity
obstructive sleep apnea
Sleep is a habit, just like eating healthy and exercise. While everyone
misses a few hours of sleep sometimes, chronic lack of sleep is part of
an unhealthy lifestyle and can increase your risk for serious health
concerns.
Having a poor work-life balance, stress, and worry can all affect how
much and how well a person sleeps. These kinds of stressors can lead
to further inflammation and health problems in addition to lack of
sleep.
Are you among the many people getting fewer than seven hours of
sleep per night? Try adopting some of these practices to help you
sleep better and longer:
Schedule your sleep: Make an effort to go to bed and wake up at the
same time every day of the week, including weekends. Doing this
establishes a regular sleep-wake cycle. It may help you adopt the habit
of doing the same things each night before bed, such as taking a warm
bath or reading.
Exercise regularly: Being physically active during the day can help you
fall asleep faster at night. Exercise also promotes deeper, more restful
sleep. Just make sure you don't exercise too close to bedtime, since
this can leave you too energized to sleep.
Apps for sleep: Some apps can help you sleep better. Sleep
Genius tracks your sleep cycles and offers a progressive alarm clock to
prevent sudden waking thats associated with increased tiredness.
Other apps, like pzizz, provide soft music and ambient lighting used to
encourage restful sleep.
TAKEAWAY
Takeaway
Research shows that consistently getting seven to eight hours of sleep
per night is beneficial. Any more or less can increase your risk for
serious conditions like diabetes, heart disease, and even death.