Heart health: Exercise not enough to offset effects of poor sleep

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Poor sleep can impact health in many ways, particularly the heart. blackCAT/Getty Images
  • A study led by researchers from Uppsala University examined how sleeping poorly can affect the body — specifically heart health.
  • In the crossover study, scientists checked the participants’ biomarkers after they underwent sessions of poor sleep and healthy sleep.
  • They found that biomarkers associated with inflammation and heart health increased after just three nights of poor sleep.

While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that adults get at least seven hours of sleep per night, this can sometimes be tough to achieve. Whether it is due to stress or underlying health issues, it is almost inevitable to get less than the recommended sleep at some point.

Not getting good sleep regularly can cause some Health issues, such as worsening mental Health or accelerated brain aging.

A new study examines how quickly the body can start reacting negatively to poor sleep. The results show that getting a bad night’s sleep just three nights in a row can start affecting health.

When seeing whether exercise could offset the effects of three nights of poor sleep, the researchers learned that it could help but did not cancel the effects of poor sleep.

The study appears in the journal Biomarker Research.

The researchers noted that prior studies have shown the cardiovascular risks of chronic poor sleep. However, they thought research on short-term sleep deprivation and physiological factors needed to be expanded.

This study examined the effects of poor sleep in 16 young men, who the researchers noted all had healthy weights. The researchers carried out the study over two sessions, each of which included three nights of monitoring in a sleep lab.

In one session, the men underwent 3 nights of restricted sleep. On these nights, they only got around 4.25 hours of sleep.

The researchers collected blood samples from the participants in the morning and evening and before and after high-intensity exercise. The high-intensity exercise sessions lasted 30 minutes each.

In another 3-night session, the participants got a normal night’s sleep of around 8.5 hours on average.

The study analyzed 88 proteins related to cardiovascular disease, such as leptin, lipoprotein lipase, and galectin-9.

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