Even a single night’s sleep loss can increase inflammation in the body

by Admin on Friday, September 5, 2008 · 0 comments

in Sleep Deprivation,Top News

Loss of sleep, even for a few short hours during the night, can prompt one’s immune system to turn against healthy tissue and organs.

A new article in the of , by the UCLA Cousins Center research team, reports that losing sleep for even part of one night can trigger the key cellular pathway that produces tissue-damaging inflammation. The findings suggest a good night’s sleep can ease the risk of both heart disease and autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis.

Specifically, the researchers measured the levels of nuclear factor (NF)-?B, a transcription factor that serves a vital role in the body’s inflammatory signaling, in healthy adults.

These measurements were repeatedly assessed, including in the morning after baseline, or normal, sleep, after partial sleep deprivation, where the volunteers were awake from 11 p.m. to 3 a.m., and after recovery sleep.

In the morning after sleep loss, they discovered that activation of (NF)-?B signaling was significantly greater than after baseline or recovery sleep. It’s important to note that they found this increase in inflammatory response in only the female subjects.

These data close an important gap in understanding the cellular mechanisms by which sleep loss enhances inflammatory biology in humans, with implications for understanding the association between sleep disturbance and risk of a wide spectrum of medical conditions including cardiovascular disease, arthritis, diabetes, certain cancers, and obesity.

, editor of who is affiliated with both and the , said "The closer that we look at sleep, the more that we learn about the benefits of sleeping. In this case, [Dr. Michael] Irwin and colleagues provide evidence that sleep deprivation is associated with enhancement of pro-inflammatory processes in the body."

"Physical and psychological stress brought on in part by grinding work, school and social schedules is keeping millions of Americans up at night," said , lead author and director of the at the .

"America’s sleep habits are simply not healthy. Our findings suggest even modest sleep loss may play a role in common disorders that affect sweeping segments of the population." In other words, sleep is vitally important to maintaining a healthy body. As Dr. Krystal notes, "these findings provide a potential mechanistic avenue through which addressing sleep disturbance might improve health."

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/Health—Sleep Deprivation/even-a-nights-sleep-loss-increases-inflammation-in-body/2008-09-085.1522
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