The Power of Sleep
New research shows a good night's rest isn't a luxury--it's critical for your brain and for your health
When
our heads hit the pillow every night, we tend to think we’re
surrendering. Not just to exhaustion, though there is that. We’re also
surrendering our mind, taking leave of our focus on sensory cues, like
noise and smell and blinking lights. It’s as if we’re powering ourselves
down like we do the electronics at our bedside–going idle for a while,
only to spring back into action when the alarm blasts hours later.
That’s what we think is happening. But as scientists are now revealing, that couldn’t be further from the truth.
In
fact, when the lights go out, our brains start working–but in an
altogether different way than when we’re awake. At night, a legion of
neurons springs into action, and like any well-trained platoon, the
cells work in perfect synchrony, pulsing with electrical signals that
wash over the brain with a soothing, hypnotic flow. Meanwhile, data
processors sort through the reams of information that flooded the brain
all day at a pace too overwhelming to handle in real time. The brain
also runs checks on itself to ensure that the exquisite balance of
hormones, enzymes and proteins isn’t too far off-kilter. And all the
while, cleaners follow in close pursuit to sweep out the toxic detritus
that the brain doesn’t need and which can cause all kinds of problems if
it builds up.
This, scientists are just now learning, is the brain on sleep. It’s
nature’s panacea, more powerful than any drug in its ability to restore
and rejuvenate the human brain and body. Getting the recommended seven
to eight hours each night can improve concentration, sharpen planning
and memory skills and maintain the fat-burning systems that regulate our
weight. If every one of us slept as much as we’re supposed to, we’d all
be lighter, less prone to developing Type 2 diabetes and most likely
better equipped to battle depression and anxiety. We might even lower
our risk of Alzheimer’s disease, osteoporosis and cancer.
The trouble is, sleep works only if we get enough of it. While plenty of pills can knock us out, none so far can replicate all of sleep’s benefits, despite decades’ worth of attempts in high-tech pharmaceutical labs.
Which is why, after long treating rest as a good-if-you-can-get-it
obligation, scientists are making the case that it matters much more
than we think. They’re not alone in sounding the alarm. With up to 70
million of us not getting a good night’s sleep on a regular basis, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers insufficient sleep a
public-health epidemic. In fact, experts argue, sleep is emerging as so
potent a factor in better health that we need a societal shift–and
policies to support it–to make sleep a nonnegotiable priority.
THE CONSEQUENCES OF SKIMPING
Despite how great we feel after a night’s rest–and putting aside what
we now know about sleep’s importance–we stubbornly refuse to swallow
our medicine, pushing off bedtime and thinking that feeling a little
drowsy during the day is an annoying but harmless consequence. It’s not.
Nearly 40% of adults have nodded off unintentionally during the day in
the past month, and 5% have done so while driving. Insomnia or
interrupted sleep nearly doubles the chances that workers will call in
sick. And half of Americans say their uneven sleep makes it harder to
concentrate on tasks.
Those poor sleep habits are trickling down to the next generation:
45% of teens don’t sleep the recommended nine hours on school nights,
leading 25% of them to report falling asleep in class at least once a
week, according to a National Sleep Foundation survey. It’s a serious
enough problem that the American Academy of Pediatrics recently endorsed
the idea of starting middle and high schools later to allow for more
adolescent shut-eye.
Health experts have been concerned about our sleep-deprived ways for
some time, but the new insights about the role sleep plays in our
overall health have brought an urgency to the message. Sleep, the
experts are recognizing, is the only time the brain has to catch its
breath. If it doesn’t, it may drown in its own biological
debris–everything from toxic free radicals produced by hard-working fuel
cells to spent molecules that have outlived their usefulness.
“We all want to push the system, to get the most out of our lives,
and sleep gets in the way,” says Dr. Sigrid Veasey, a leading sleep
researcher and a professor of medicine at Perelman School of Medicine at
the University of Pennsylvania. “But we need to know how far we can
really push that system and get away with it.”
Veasey is learning that brain cells that don’t get their needed break
every night are like overworked employees on consecutive double
shifts–eventually, they collapse. Working with mice, she found that
neurons that fire constantly to keep the brain alert spew out toxic free
radicals as a by-product of making energy. During sleep, they produce
antioxidants that mop up these potential poisons. But even after short
periods of sleep loss, “the cells are working hard but cannot make
enough antioxidants, so they progressively build up free radicals and
some of the neurons die off.” Once those brain cells are gone, they’re
gone for good.
After several weeks of restricted sleep, says Veasey, the mice she
studied–whose brains are considered a good proxy for human brains in lab
research–“are more likely to be sleepy when they are supposed to be
active and have more difficulty consolidating [the benefits of] sleep
during their sleep period.”
It’s the same thing that happens in aging brains, she says, as nerve
cells get less efficient at clearing away their garbage. “The real
question is: What are we doing to our brains if we don’t get enough
sleep? If we chronically sleep-deprive ourselves, are we really aging
our brains?” she asks. Ultimately, the research suggests, it’s possible
that a sleep-deprived brain belonging to a teen or a 20-year-old will
start to look like that of a much older person.
“Chronic sleep restriction is a stress on the body,” says Dr. Peter
Liu, professor of medicine at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and L.A.
Biomedical Research Institute. And the cause of that sleep deprivation
doesn’t always originate in family strife, financial concerns or
job-related problems. The way we live now–checking our phones every
minute, hyperscheduling our days or our kids’ days, not taking time to
relax without a screen in front of our faces–contributes to a regular
flow of stress hormones like cortisol, and all that artificial light and
screen time is disrupting our internal clocks. Simply put, our bodies
don’t know when to go to sleep naturally anymore.
This is why researchers hope their new discoveries will change once
and for all the way we think about–and prioritize–those 40 winks.
GARBAGEMEN FOR YOUR BRAIN
“I was nervous when I went to my first sleep conference,” says Dr.
Maiken Nedergaard, the chatty and inquisitive co-director of the Center
for Translational Neuromedicine at the University of Rochester. “I was
not trained in sleep, and I came to it from the outside.” In fact, as a
busy mother and career woman, she saw sleep the way most of us probably
do: as a bother. “Every single night, I wanted to accomplish more and
enjoy time with my family, and I was annoyed to have to go to bed.”
Because she’s a neuroscientist, however, Nedergaard was inclined to
ask a seemingly basic question: Why do our brains need sleep at all?
There are two competing evolutionary theories. One is that sleeping
organisms are immobile and therefore less likely to be easy targets, so
perhaps sleep provided some protection from prey. The time slumbering,
however, took away from time spent finding food and reproducing. Another
points out that sleeping organisms are oblivious to creeping predators,
making them ripe for attack. Since both theories seem to put us at a
disadvantage, Nedergaard thought there had to be some other reason the
brain needs those hours offline.
All organs in the body use energy, and in the process, they spew out
waste. Most take care of their garbage with an efficient local system,
recruiting immune cells like macrophages to gobble up the garbage and
break it down or linking up to the network of vessels that make up the
lymph system, the body’s drainage pipes.
The brain is a tremendous consumer of energy, but it’s not blanketed
in lymph vessels. So how does it get rid of its trash? “If the brain is
not functioning optimally, you’re dead evolutionarily, so there must be
an advantage to exporting the garbage to a less critical organ like the
liver to take care of it,” says Nedergaard.
Indeed, that’s what her research shows. She found that an army of
previously ignored cells in the brain, called glial cells, turn into a
massive pump when the body sleeps. During the day, glial cells are the
unsung personal assistants of the brain. They cannot conduct electrical
impulses like other neurons, but they support them as they send signals
zipping along nerve networks to register a smell here and an emotion
there. For decades, they were dismissed by neuroscientists because they
weren’t the actual drivers of neural connections.
But Nedergaard found in clinical trials on mice that glial cells
change as soon as organisms fall asleep. The difference between the
waking and sleeping brain is dramatic. When the brain is awake, it
resembles a busy airport, swelling with the cumulative activity of
individual messages traveling from one neuron to another. The activity
inflates the size of brain cells until they take up 86% of the brain’s
volume.
When daylight wanes and we eventually fall asleep, however, those
glial cells kick into action, slowing the brain’s electrical activity to
about a third of its peak frequency. During those first stages of
sleep, called non-REM (rapid eye movement), the firing becomes more
synchronized rather than haphazard. The repetitive cycle lulls the
nerves into a state of quiet, so in the next stage, known as REM, the
firing becomes almost nonexistent. The brain continues to toggle back
and forth between non-REM and REM sleep throughout the night, once every
hour and a half.
At the same time, the sleeping brain’s cells shrink, making more room
for the brain and spinal cord’s fluid to slosh back and forth between
them. “It’s like a dishwasher that keeps flushing through to wash the
dirt away,” says Nedergaard. This cleansing also occurs in the brain
when we are awake, but it’s reduced by about 15%, since the glial cells
have less fluid space to work with when the neurons expand.
This means that when we don’t get enough sleep, the glial cells
aren’t as efficient at clearing the brain’s garbage. That may push
certain degenerative brain disorders that are typical of later life to
appear much earlier.
Both Nedergaard’s and Veasey’s work also hint at why older brains are
more prone to developing Alzheimer’s, which is caused by a buildup of
amyloid protein that isn’t cleared quickly enough.
“There is much less flow to clear away things in the aging brain,”
says Nedergaard. “The garbage system picks up every three weeks instead
of every week.” And like any growing pile of trash, the molecular
garbage starts to affect nearby healthy cells, interfering with their
ability to form and recall memories or plan even the simplest tasks.
The consequences of deprived sleep, says Dr. Mary Carskadon,
professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University, are
“scary, really scary.”
RIGHTSIZING YOUR SLEEP
All this isn’t actually so alarming, since there’s a simple fix that
can stop this nerve die-off and slow the brain’s accelerated ride toward
aging. What’s needed, says Carskadon, is a rebranding of sleep that
strips away any hint of its being on the sidelines of our health.
As it is, sleep is so undervalued that getting by on fewer hours has
become a badge of honor. Plus, we live in a culture that caters to the
late-nighter, from 24-hour grocery stores to online shopping sites that
never close. It’s no surprise, then, that more than half of American
adults don’t get the recommended seven to nine hours of shut-eye every
night.
Whether or not we can catch up on sleep–on the weekend, say–is a
hotly debated topic among sleep researchers; the latest evidence
suggests that while it isn’t ideal, it might help. When Liu, the UCLA
sleep researcher and professor of medicine, brought chronically
sleep-restricted people into the lab for a weekend of sleep during which
they logged about 10 hours per night, they showed improvements in the
ability of insulin to process blood sugar. That suggests that catch-up
sleep may undo some but not all of the damage that sleep deprivation
causes, which is encouraging given how many adults don’t get the hours
they need each night. Still, Liu isn’t ready to endorse the habit of
sleeping less and making up for it later. “It’s like telling people you
only need to eat healthy during the weekends, but during the week you
can eat whatever you like,” he says. “It’s not the right health
message.”
Sleeping pills, while helpful for some, are not necessarily a silver
bullet either. “A sleeping pill will target one area of the brain, but
there’s never going to be a perfect sleeping pill, because you couldn’t
really replicate the different chemicals moving in and out of different
parts of the brain to go through the different stages of sleep,” says
Dr. Nancy Collop, director of the Emory University Sleep Center. Still,
for the 4% of Americans who rely on prescription sleep aids, the slumber
they get with the help of a pill is better than not sleeping at all or
getting interrupted sleep. At this point, it’s not clear whether the
brain completes the same crucial housekeeping duties during medicated
sleep as it does during natural sleep, and the long-term effects on the
brain of relying on sleeping pills aren’t known either.
Making things trickier is the fact that we are unaware of the toll
sleep deprivation takes on us. Studies consistently show that people who
sleep less than eight hours a night don’t perform as well on
concentration and memory tests but report feeling no deficits in their
thinking skills. That just perpetuates the tendency to dismiss sleep and
its critical role in everything from our mental faculties to our
metabolic health.
The ideal is to reset the body’s natural sleep-wake cycle, a matter
of training our bodies to sleep similar amounts every night and wake up
at roughly the same time each day. An even better way to rediscover our
natural cycle is to get as much exposure to natural light as possible
during the day, while limiting how much indoor lighting, including from
computer and television screens, we see at night. And of course, the
best way to accomplish that is by making those seven to nine hours of
sleep a must–not a luxury.
“I am now looking at and thinking of sleep as an ‘environmental
exposure,'” says Brown University’s Carskadon–which means we should look
at sleep similarly to how we view air-pollution exposure, secondhand
smoke or toxins in our drinking water. If she and other researchers have
their way, checking up on sleep would be a routine part of any physical
exam, and doctors would ask about our sleep habits in the same way they
query us about diet, stress, exercise, our sex life, our eyesight–you
name it. And if we aren’t sleeping enough, they might prescribe a
change, just as they would for any other bad health habit.
Some physicians are already taking the initiative, but no
prescription works unless we actually take it. If our work schedule cuts
into our sleep time, we need to make the sleep we get count by avoiding
naps and exercising when we can during the day; feeling tired will get
us to fall asleep sooner. If we need help dozing off, gentle exercises
or yoga-type stretching can also help. Creating a sleep ritual can make
sleep something we look forward to rather than something we feel
obligated to do, so we’re more likely to get our allotted time instead
of skipping it. A favorite book, a warm bath or other ways to get drowsy
might prompt us to actually look forward to unwinding at the end of the
day.
Given what scientists are learning about how much the body–and
especially the brain–needs a solid and consistent amount of sleep,
in-the-know doctors aren’t waiting for more studies to prove what we as a
species know intuitively: that cheating ourselves of sleep is depriving
us from taking advantage of one of nature’s most powerful drugs.
“We now know that there is a lasting price to pay for sleep loss,”
says Veasey. “We used to think that if you don’t sleep enough, you can
sleep more and you’ll be fine tomorrow. We now know if you push the
system enough, that’s simply not true.”
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