Lack of Sleep Could be Deadly

October 10, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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By Tina Hesman Saey, Science News

For many people, days just don’t seem long enough. In order to cram everything into one 24-hour period, something has to give. Judging by many surveys of Americans, it’s sleep.

Sleep is regarded by some as unproductive, wasteful downtime. People who would rather hit the hay than the dance floor are told that only losers snooze and that they can sleep when they’re dead.

But new data about sleep’s benefits suggest that losing sleep might speed up death’s arrival. Recent research also shows that people who don’t snooze enough face a higher risk of losing their health than those who regularly get a good night’s sleep.

“What is certain is that we can’t do without sleep,” says Peter Meerlo, a neuroscientist at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.

Some of the consequences of lost sleep are immediate, obvious and unpleasant, such as a toddler’s crabbiness after missing a nap. Older children and adults get irritable when tired, too. Sleepy students don’t learn or perform as well as their well-rested peers. And nodding off at work probably won’t help anyone get a promotion.

Other penalties for staying up too late can be far more serious, even deadly. Studies have linked chronic sleep loss to obesity, heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and shorter lives (SN: 2/8/03, p. 85) in people and laboratory animals. And now, a new study links sleep loss in mice to Alzheimer’s disease plaques (SN: 10/24/09, p. 11). And some evidence suggests that stinting on sleep night after night may cause long-term — maybe even permanent — changes in the brain, some of which may predispose people to mental disorders such as depression.

Just one night of short sleep has been shown to increase levels of inflammatory chemicals in the blood (SN: 10/11/08,p. 14) and increase hunger-promoting hormones. A week of getting just two hours less sleep per night than usual changed the way people in one study responded to glucose, mirroring a change seen in people who develop diabetes.

And lack of sleep can also have immediate injurious or fatal consequences: The National Highway Transportation Safety Administration estimates that drowsy-driving crashes result in about 40,000 nonfatal injuries and 1,550 deaths each year, probably a conservative estimate. Now, scientists are trying to understand not only how sleep deprivation affects driving performance, but also why one sleepy person might drive fine while another becomes a road menace.

Too tired to function

Nodding off behind the wheel is a common occurrence in David Dinges’ lab at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia. 

Dinges and his colleagues limit volunteers’ time in bed to four hours a night for five nights, then let the volunteers sleep up to 10 hours for two days. The aim of the experiments is to learn more about how the brain responds to the kind of chronic sleep deprivation people experience in real life, and to find out how much sleep is needed to repay the debt.

To read more of this article click here. To read other feature articles by Science News staff reporters, visit the Features channel at www.sciencenews.org.

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if I cut zolpidem in half, will I get a full nights sleep , and not be tired in the morning? If not , can I take 4 benedryl instead, which would be better, for a good nights sleep,, please help me.

Donna of CT 9:19PM April 29, 2013

This article talked about consequences of sleep deprivation in the brain. It mentions several studies findings that lack of sleep causes mood changes, lack of attention, irritability, and more severe consequences such as obesity, heart disease, diabetes and even death. This study seems to suggest that lack of sleep can be deadly, which is not entirely true. I know from psychology class that lack of sleep is not actually a cause of death, but can contribute to factors that may be (like heart disease, etc.). This also reminds me of the principle of the "third-variable problem" we learned about. Often if two things seem related there is often a third variable (or contributing factor) that makes one thing seem to cause another. This may have been overlooked in the studies. Also, correlation does not necessarily equal causation. This article did mention many of the side effects of a lack of sleep and I think it was successful in supporting its findings with factual studies, and making the point that a good nights sleep is important.

Kelly of OH 11:59PM February 19, 2013

This is so stupid

Lewis Mason of CA 10:29AM February 12, 2013

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