Health
What Lack of Sleep Does to Your Body
6
Major Health Problems Caused By Lack of Sleep
How
skimping on sleep hurts your health
6
Health Concerns Sleeping Can Avoid
You deal with the fallout of not
getting enough sleep by feeling a little groggy every morning.
But what you may not realize is the domino effect at work here, and it’s much
more dangerous than just feeling tired. Increasingly, researchers tell us, it’s
clear that “short sleeping” can get us into plenty of trouble with our
health. Insufficient sleep is linked not only to obesity—which brings
its own set of health issues—but also to a host of other maladies.
Here’s a
sampling of health problems you might bring on by skimping on sleep.
Cardiovascular
Disease
In a 2010 study published in the
journal Sleep, researchers at the West Virginia University School of
Medicine reviewed data from 30,397 people who had participated in the 2005
National Health Interview Study. They discovered that those sleeping fewer than
7 hours a night were at increased risk of heart disease. In particular, women under 60 who
sleep 5 hours or fewer a night have twice the risk for developing heart
disease.
Diabetes
According to a study in the journal Diabetes
in 2011, University of Chicago and Northwestern University researchers found
that when people with type 2 diabetes slept poorly at night, they had a 9
percent higher fasting glucose level, a 30 percent higher fasting insulin
level, and a 43 percent higher insulin resistance level. Diabetics with
insomnia fared even worse—their fasting glucose levels were 23 percent higher,
their fasting insulin levels were 48 percent higher, and their insulin
resistance levels were 82 percent higher than diabetics who didn’t have insomnia.
Breast
Cancer
Researchers at Tohoku University
Graduate School of Medicine in Sendai, Japan, studied data from nearly 24,000
women ages 40 to 79, and learned that those who slept fewer than 6 hours a
night had a 62 percent higher risk for breast cancer, while those who slept more than 9
hours a night had a 28 percent lower risk. Why You're Really Tired All The Time
Urinary
Problems
In findings presented at the May
2011 meeting of the American Urological Association, researchers at the New
England Research Institute in Watertown, MA, reviewed data from 4,145
middle-aged men and women and here’s what they discovered: Five years of
sleeping restlessly or too little (fewer than 5 hours a night) can increase by
80 to 90 percent a woman’s risk of needing to wake at night to urinate
(nocturia) or of becoming incontinent. A whopping 42 percent of the women
classified themselves as restless sleepers, compared with 34 percent of the
men. The researchers theorize that sleeping poorly causes inflammation, which
in turn can lead to urinary problems.
Colon
Cancer
In a study of 1,240 people published
in 2011, Case Western University researchers found that those who slept fewer
than 6 hours a night were 47 percent more likely to have colorectal polyps,
which can become cancerous, than people who clocked at least 7 hours of sleep.
Mortality
A 10-year study of some 16,000 people by
researchers at the University of Copenhagen connected the dots between a lack
of sleep and an increased risk of mortality. It turns out that the men who
reported sleeping badly, especially those under 45, had twice the risk for
death than men who reported sleeping well. And men who had three or more sleep
disturbances a night had a suicide risk five times higher than men whose sleep
was undisturbed. Though sleep disturbances didn’t affect women’s mortality,
both women and men who reported sleep disturbances were more likely to have
high blood pressure and diabetes.
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