You may literally have to add it to your to-do list, but scheduling a good night's sleep could be one of the smartest health priorities you set. It's not just daytime drowsiness you risk when shortchanging yourself on your seven to eight hours. Possible health consequences of getting too little or poor sleep can involve the cardiovascular, endocrine, immune, and nervous systems. In addition to letting life get in the way of good sleep, between 50 and 70 million Americans suffer from a chronic sleep disorder-insomnia or sleep apnea, say-that affects daily functioning and impinges on health. Consider the research:
1) Less may mean more. For people who sleep under seven hours a night, the fewer zzzz's they get, the more obese they tend to be, according to a 2006 Institute of Medicine report. This may relate to the discovery that insufficient sleep appears to tip hunger hormones out of whack. Leptin, which suppresses appetite, is lowered; ghrelin, which stimulates appetite, gets a boost.
2) You're more apt to make bad food choices. A study published this week in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine found that people with obstructive sleep apnea or other severely disordered breathing while asleep ate a diet higher in cholesterol, protein, total fat, and total saturated fat. Women were especially affected.
3) Diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance, its precursor, may become more likely. A 2005 study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that people getting five or fewer hours of sleep each night were 2.5 times more likely to be diabetic, while those with six hours or fewer were 1.7 times more likely.
4) The ticker is put at risk. A 2003 study found that heart attacks were 45 percent more likely in women who slept for five or fewer hours per night than in those who got more.
5) Blood pressure may increase. Obstructive sleep apnea, for example, has been associated with chronically elevated daytime blood pressure, and the more severe the disorder, the more significant the hypertension, suggests the 2006 IOM report. Obesity plays a role in both disorders, so losing weight can ease associated health risks.
表面上你可能不得不把睡覺(jué)當(dāng)做是必須要做的事,但是晚上睡眠好可是保持健康的最明智的頭等大事。輕忽自欺那七八個(gè)小時(shí)的睡眠,不僅僅冒著白天犯困的危險(xiǎn),睡眠太少還可能危害健康,包括導(dǎo)致心血管病,引起內(nèi)分泌失調(diào)、免疫系統(tǒng)失調(diào)以及神經(jīng)系統(tǒng)失調(diào)。
為了獲得良好的睡眠,五到七千萬(wàn)的美國(guó)人正在遭受睡眠紊亂,失眠或者睡眠窒息,嚴(yán)重每天正常生活,侵害健康。
考慮一下下面的研究發(fā)現(xiàn):
1)睡的越少,長(zhǎng)的越胖。據(jù)2006年科學(xué)研究院的報(bào)告顯示,每晚睡眠少于七個(gè)小時(shí)的人,打呼嚕的時(shí)間少了,也就更容易發(fā)胖。聯(lián)系到一項(xiàng)研究發(fā)現(xiàn):睡眠不足似乎會(huì)把饑餓荷爾蒙從被壓抑狀態(tài)釋放出來(lái)。抑制食欲的瘦蛋白減少,饑餓激素劇增,刺激胃口大開。
2)更易選擇不應(yīng)該吃的食物。本周,發(fā)表在《臨床睡眠醫(yī)學(xué)》上的一項(xiàng)研究發(fā)現(xiàn),患有阻塞性睡眠呼吸暫;蛘咚哌^(guò)程中其它嚴(yán)重呼吸紊亂的人,吃的食物中含有的膽固醇、蛋白質(zhì)、全脂、飽和脂肪酸更高。女性尤為如此。
3)更易導(dǎo)致糖尿病和葡萄糖耐受性失調(diào)。2005年發(fā)表在《內(nèi)部醫(yī)學(xué)文獻(xiàn)》上的一項(xiàng)研究發(fā)現(xiàn),睡眠不足5個(gè)小時(shí)的人換患糖尿病的可能性是常人的2.5倍,不足6個(gè)小時(shí)的人則是1.7倍。
4)心臟岌岌可危。2003年的一項(xiàng)研究發(fā)現(xiàn),睡眠不足5個(gè)小時(shí)的女性患有心臟病的可能性是比其睡眠多的人高45%.
5)血壓易升高。例如,據(jù)2006年《內(nèi)部醫(yī)學(xué)文獻(xiàn)》報(bào)告顯示,阻塞性睡眠呼吸暫停已經(jīng)和長(zhǎng)期的日期血壓升高聯(lián)系起來(lái)了,睡眠紊亂越嚴(yán)重血壓越高。高血壓和睡眠紊亂,肥胖都是罪魁禍?zhǔn)祝虼藴p肥能夠減少一些相關(guān)的健康隱患。