For immediate release
March 26, 2008
SLEEP DEPRIVATION FOSTERS
INACTIVITY
Inadequate sleep can lead to increased appetite, energy deficit
– and weight gain
LONG BEACH, Calif. – As many as one in four people have some
type of sleeping disorder, but only half are diagnosed, said researcher
William G. Herbert, Ph.D., FACSM in a presentation today at the American College of Sports Medicine’s
12th-annual Health & Fitness Summit &
Exposition.
Although much is still unknown about exactly
how sleep and its restorative processes work, researchers have begun to
uncover many of the ways in which missed sleep is detrimental,
especially as it relates to exercise and health.
“It’s remarkable how little we
actually know about sleep and its relation to the body, but we’re
learning,” Herbert said. “It’s a complex area to
investigate, but the opportunities to dig deeper into how sleep relates
to health and physical activity are excellent.”
According to Herbert, sleep is key in
regulating the body’s processes, including appetite and
metabolism. Lack of sleep can throw these processes off balance, and may
lead to overeating, and in turn, gradual weight gain over
time.
Getting enough sleep – seven to eight
hours per night for adults – is also important for replenishing
the body’s psychic energy stores. Feeling sluggish or lacking
energy during waking hours isn’t very conducive to exercise
motivation and can cause excessive inactivity, another contributing
factor to obesity.
Being overweight can then create a vicious
cycle between lack of sleep and lack of exercise. Too, obesity can cause
sleep apnea, leading to disrupted sleep patterns, sluggishness,
inactivity, and even high blood pressure.
“In the most severe cases of sleep apnea,
a person can wake more than 100 times during a night of sleep, gasping
for air,” Herbert said. “Sleep apnea sufferers typically
have a chronic lack of energy and motivation to
exercise.”
Researchers have found that those with high
blood pressure may want to avoid early morning workouts, as blood
pressure tends to rise slightly for all of us after waking. For those
with high blood pressure, this elevation may persist longer with early
morning exercise.
Herbert also discussed the comparable
physiological processes behind exercise and sleep. Both are remarkably
connected to the body’s temperature control system, but in
opposite ways. In exercise, blood flow in active muscles carries heat
away, but without allowing the brain temperature to rise but a few
degrees. In triggering the transitioning to sleep, however, these same
temperature controls cool the brain slightly by diverting its warmer
blood to the legs and arms. Researchers plan to use this mirroring
effect to delve further into the connections and similarities between
sleep and physical activity.
The American College of Sports Medicine is the
largest sports medicine and exercise science organization in the
world. More than 20,000 International, National and Regional
members are dedicated to promoting and integrating scientific research,
education and practical applications of sports medicine and exercise
science to maintain and enhance physical performance, fitness, health
and quality of life.
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