Skip to content
Neuropsych

Sleep deprivation affects fertility, memory, and even your immune response after a vaccine

Are you getting a full 8 hours?

Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

How well did you sleep last night? And how has that affected the way you feel today? Most of us will have experienced poor sleep or even insomnia at some point and know all too well how it leaves you feeling.


What might be less well known is how much you benefit from getting enough sleep. Not only will you wake up feeling refreshed and ready to take on the day, your mental and physical wellbeing will get a boost. Sleep can help your immune system to be at its best, while not getting enough might even render your vaccinations less effective.

Writing in the BBC Science Focus magazine, Dr Matthew Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, says: “There is no major health system within your body or operation within your brain, that isn’t wonderfully enhanced by sleep when you get it, or demonstrably impaired when you don’t get enough.”

During the pandemic, many people have reported finding getting a good night’s sleep harder. A UK study in April 2020 found that 36% of respondents aged 35-44 found their sleep had been disturbed by the lockdown.

Other consequences of sleep deprivation that Walker highlights include:

The role of poor sleep in Alzheimer’s Disease

A detailed study from Berkeley, involving Walker, identified a link between poor sleep and one of the most common forms of dementia – Alzheimer’s Disease. Worldwide, more than 50 million people are living with dementia, according to the organization Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI). Every 20 years, that number is likely to double, and by 2050 an estimated 152 million people across the globe will be living with this debilitating ailment.”

The total estimated worldwide cost of dementia was $818 billion in 2015, which represents 1.09% of global GDP,” according to the ADI, which puts the present day global cost of dementia at more than $818 billion per year.

Although their report makes it clear that many questions remain unanswered, the authors of the Berkeley research report highlight a link between insomnia and other sleep disturbances and an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s Disease: “Sleep disruption appears to be a core component of Alzheimer’s Disease and its pathophysiology.”

Can sleep deprivation harm your immunity?

A separate study from the psychology department at Carnegie Mellon University, found that: “Poorer sleep efficiency and shorter sleep duration in the weeks preceding exposure to a rhinovirus were associated with lower resistance to illness.”

In other words, if you’re not getting enough sleep, you stand a greater chance of catching a cold.

The researchers tracked the sleep patterns of 153 healthy men and women aged 21-55 years. After 14 days, the participants were quarantined and given nasal drops containing a virus for the common cold. Those who averaged less than seven hours sleep per night were 2.94 times more likely to develop a cold than participants with a sleep average of eight or more hours per night.

How to sleep better

The oft-repeated advice is to get eight hours’ of shuteye a night, and it’s borne out by Walker, who says most adults need between seven and nine hours of sleep each night. But for some people that is easier said than done – parents of very young children in particular may wonder if they will ever sleep for anything approaching eight hours a night again.

There are some things most people can try to make it more likely they will fall asleep easily. And stay that way.Stick to a routine, says the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) on its sleep advice webpage. Gentle exercises to relax the body before going to bed are one option. Another is to take a warm bath.

Sleep aids such as relaxation audio – music or spoken word – can also help. Mindfulness and meditation exercises, such as focusing your attention on your breathing can also help to settle a busy, distracted mind, the NHS suggests.

Reprinted with permission of the World Economic Forum. Read the original article.


Related

Up Next