How do alcohol and caffeine affect sleep?

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
A person holds the straw in a glass of iced coffee getting ready to stir itShare on Pinterest
Caffeine and alcohol may seem like they are aiding sleep, but a new study shows it does the opposite. Yana Iskayeva/Getty Images
  • Researchers consider insufficient sleep to be an unrecognized worldwide health issue.
  • People who have sleep issues commonly use caffeine during the day to stay awake and alcohol at night to help them sleep.
  • Researchers from the University of Washington School of Medicine found people who use both substances did not perceive a reduction in their sleep quality.
  • Scientists believe this false perception may lead to a habitual self-medicating cycle that people do not realize, leading to poor sleep.

Insufficient sleep is considered by researchers to be an unrecognized global health concern.

Past studies show around one third of the world’s population is affected by insomnia symptoms. And as many as 70 million Americans have a sleep disorder.

People who find themselves tired during the day from poor sleep commonly drink caffeinated beverages during the day to help them stay awake.

These same people may also drink alcohol at night to help them sleep.

Now, a new study published in the journal PLOS ONE is the first known to take a look at how the use of both substances — caffeine and alcohol — affect overall sleep.

Researchers from the University of Washington School of Medicine found study participants who used caffeine during the day and alcohol at night did not perceive a reduction in their sleep quality, despite the substances reducing perceived sleep quality when studied individually.

Scientists believe this false perception may lead to a habitual self-medicating cycle that people do not realize, leading to poor sleep.

After reviewing this study, Dr. John Saito, a pulmonologist at the Children’s Hospital of Orange County and a member of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine Public Awareness Advisory Committee, told MNT he was not surprised by these findings.

“As a sedative, alcohol is a neurotoxin that depresses our central nervous system and reduces our awareness of our surroundings,” Dr. Saito explained.

“Sedation is not sleep. As stated, alcohol consumption prior to sleep significantly disrupts normal restorative sleep. As a stimulant, caffeine increases alertness by blocking our brain’s perception of sleepiness and thus has been shown to reduce our sleep duration.”
— Dr. John Saito

“In the short term, taking chemicals for symptomatic relief is not new and thus, the observation that taking both caffeine and alcohol together altered perception of sleep quality was not surprising. Just like banging your head against the wall daily and taking cannabis and reporting that pain was not as severe as expected,” he said.

MNT also spoke with Dr. Monique May, a board certified family physician and medical advisor for Aeroflow Sleep, about this study.

Dr. May said doctors could use this data to warn their patients about the slippery slope of self-medication.

“There is the potential for people to need more of either substance to balance themselves out, and that could become problematic given the addictive risk of alcohol,” she explained.

“[People] should be aware that alcohol tends to negatively affect the quality of sleep while caffeine negatively affects the quantity of sleep.”
— Dr. Monique May

“It is also important to point out that in the study there was also a small effect on sleep quality caused by caffeine, but to a lesser extent than that on sleep quantity. This ‘mismatch in perception between sleep quantity and sleep quality’ may explain why people still use caffeine despite its harmful effects on sleep,” Dr. May added.

TAGGED: , , ,
Share this Article