40 FACTS
ABOUT SLEEP YOU PROBABLY DIDN'T KNOW... (OR WERE TOO TIRED
TO THINK ABOUT)
-The
record for the longest period without sleep is 18 days, 21 hours, 40 minutes
during a rocking chair marathon. The record holder reported hallucinations,
paranoia, blurred vision, slurred speech and memory and concentration
lapses.
- It's
impossible to tell if someone is really awake without close medical supervision.
People can take cat naps with their eyes open without even being aware of
it.
- Anything less than five minutes to fall
asleep at night means you're sleep deprived. The ideal is between 10 and 15
minutes, meaning you're still tired enough to sleep deeply, but not so exhausted
you feel sleepy by day.
- A new baby typically results in 400-750
hours lost sleep for parents in the first year
- One of the best predictors of insomnia
later in life is the development of bad habits from having sleep disturbed by
young children.
- The continuous brain recordings that led to
the discovery of REM (rapid eye-movement) sleep were not done until 1953, partly
because the scientists involved were concerned about wasting paper.
- REM sleep occurs in bursts totalling about
2 hours a night, usually beginning about 90 minutes after falling
asleep.
- Dreams, once thought to occur only during
REM sleep, also occur (but to a lesser extent) in non-REM sleep phases. It's
possible there may not be a single moment of our sleep when we are actually
dreamless.
- REM dreams are characterised by bizarre
plots, but non-REM dreams are repetitive and thought-like, with little imagery -
obsessively returning to a suspicion you left your mobile phone somewhere, for
example.
- Certain types of eye movements during REM
sleep correspond to specific movements in dreams, suggesting at least part of
the dreaming process is analagous to watching a film
- No-one knows for sure if other species
dream but some do have sleep cycles similar to humans.
- Elephants sleep standing up during non-REM
sleep, but lie down for REM sleep.
- Some scientists believe we dream to fix
experiences in long-term memory, that is, we dream about things worth
remembering. Others reckon we dream about things worth forgetting - to eliminate
overlapping memories that would otherwise clog up our brains.
- Dreams may not serve any purpose at all but
be merely a meaningless byproduct of two evolutionary adaptations - sleep and
consciousness.
- REM sleep may help developing brains
mature. Premature babies have 75 per cent REM sleep, 10 per cent more than
full-term bubs. Similarly, a newborn kitten puppy rat or hampster experiences
only REM sleep, while a newborn guinea pig (which is much more developed at
birth) has almost no REM sleep at all.
- Scientists have not been able to explain a
1998 study showing a bright light shone on the backs of human knees can reset
the brain's sleep-wake clock.
- British Ministry of Defence researchers
have been able to reset soldiers' body clocks so they can go without sleep for
up to 36 hrs. Tiny optical fibres embedded in special spectacles project a ring
of bright white light (with a spectrum identical to a sunrise) around the edge
of soldiers' retinas, fooling them into thinking they have just woken up. The
system was first used on US pilots during the bombing of Kosovo.
- Seventeen hours of sustained wakefulness
leads to a decrease in performance equivalent to a blood alcohol-level of 0.05%.
-
The 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill off Alaska, the Challenger space shuttle
disaster and the Chernobyl nuclear accident have all been attributed to human
errors in which sleep-deprivation played a role.
- The NRMA estimates
fatigue is involved in one in 6 fatal road accidents.
- Exposure to noise at
night can suppress immune function even if the sleeper doesn’t wake. Unfamiliar
noise, and noise during the first and last two hours of sleep, has the greatest
disruptive effect on the sleep cycle.
- The "natural alarm
clock" which enables some people to wake up more or less when they want to is
caused by a burst of the stress hormone adrenocorticotropin. Researchers say
this reflects an unconscious anticipation of the stress of waking up.
- Some sleeping tablets,
such as barbiturates suppress REM sleep, which can be harmful over a long
period.
- In insomnia following
bereavement, sleeping pills can disrupt grieving.
- Tiny luminous rays
from a digital alarm clock can be enough to disrupt the sleep cycle even if you
do not fully wake. The light turns off a "neural switch" in the brain, causing
levels of a key sleep chemical to decline within minutes.
- To drop off we must
cool off; body temperature and the brain's sleep-wake cycle are closely linked.
That's why hot summer nights can cause a restless sleep. The blood flow
mechanism that transfers core body heat to the skin works best between 18 and 30
degrees. But later in life, the comfort zone shrinks to between 23 and 25
degrees - one reason why older people have more sleep disorders.
- A night on the grog
will help you get to sleep but it will be a light slumber and you won't dream
much.
- After five nights of
partial sleep deprivation, three drinks will have the same effect on your body
as six would when you've slept enough.
- Humans sleep on
average around three hours less than other primates like chimps, rhesus monkeys,
squirrel monkeys and baboons, all of whom sleep for 10 hours.
- Ducks at risk of
attack by predators are able to balance the need for sleep and survival, keeping
one half of the brain awake while the other slips into sleep mode.
- Ten per cent of
snorers have sleep apnoea, a disorder which causes sufferers to stop breathing
up to 300 times a night and significantly increases the risk of suffering a
heart attack or stroke.
- Snoring occurs only in
non-REM sleep
- Teenagers need as much
sleep as small children (about 10 hrs) while those over 65 need the least of all
(about six hours). For the average adult aged 25-55, eight hours is considered
optimal
- Some studies suggest
women need up to an hour's extra sleep a night compared to men, and not getting
it may be one reason women are much more susceptible to depression than
men.
- Feeling tired can feel
normal after a short time. Those deliberately deprived of sleep for research
initially noticed greatly the effects on their alertness, mood and physical
performance, but the awareness dropped off after the first few days.
- Diaries from the
pre-electric-light-globe Victorian era show adults slept nine to 10 hours a
night with periods of rest changing with the seasons in line with sunrise and
sunsets.
- Most of what we know
about sleep we've learned in the past 25 years.
- As a group, 18 to 24
year-olds deprived of sleep suffer more from impaired performance than older
adults.
- Experts say one of the
most alluring sleep distractions is the 24-hour accessibility of the internet.
- The extra-hour of
sleep received when clocks are put back at the start of daylight in Canada has
been found to coincide with a fall in the number of road accidents.
Mattress Protectors; Are They Worth It?
Source: ABC Australia
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