

Stroke Risk Spikes In Healthy Adults Who Don't Get Enough Sleep 70
hessian writes "Attention, busy middle-aged folks. You may be healthy and thin, but if you habitually sleep less than six hours a night, you still could be boosting your risk of a stroke. That's the surprising conclusion of a new study being presented Monday at SLEEP 2012, the annual meeting of the nation's sleep experts."
Damn (Score:1)
Re:Damn (Score:5, Funny)
Time to cut back on that gaming all nighters once you hit 30 then.
Need to get as many as possible until then!
But only if you have a normal Body Mass Index (BMI).
FTFA
In people who fell into normal weight categories -- a body mass index of 18.5 to nearly 25 -- those who reported sleeping less than six hours a night were at about 4.5 times greater risk of developing stroke symptoms than whose who slept seven and eight hours a night. Surprisingly, that increase wasn't apparent in overweight or obese people who slept less.
The increased stroke risk ONLY OCCURRED IN NORMALLY SIZED PATIENTS
The application of this study to the Slashdot population should be obvious. Not to worry.
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Probably because the risk increase from being overweight was more than risk increase from not sleeping.
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The increased stroke risk ONLY OCCURRED IN NORMALLY SIZED PATIENTS
Did get me wondering if stroke risk between USA and Europe is significantly different but there's probably just too many other lifestyle differences for an accurate comparison.
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Have you people failed to read the brochures provided when your Wi-Fi electric meters were installed?
Do not interrupt sleep while your RFID DRM Memory Audit Chip (most likely installed with your last flu shot) is being polled to see what you heard and watched during the previous day.
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7 of 9 Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix 001
Re:Damn (Score:5, Insightful)
The increased stroke risk ONLY OCCURRED IN NORMALLY SIZED PATIENTS
Never mind all that. The real gem is this:
those who reported sleeping less than six hours a night were at about 4.5 times greater risk of developing stroke symptoms...
So they didn't actually measure how much sleep the subjects got. They just took their word on it. Given that some people will overestimate or underestimate their sleep, this could just mean that the people who tend to underreport their sleep are the same people who tend to have strokes.
Basically, the study is useless.
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So they didn't actually measure how much sleep the subjects got. They just took their word on it. Given that some people will overestimate or underestimate their sleep, this could just mean that the people who tend to underreport their sleep are the same people who tend to have strokes.
Basically, the study is useless.
Not really. As long as you are prone to exaggerating the amount of sleep you get, you'll be OK.
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I had an uncle who died of stroke at age 28. Don't wait until you're thirty to get sleep. Not enough sleep has a few other bad effects, too, one of which is aging rapidly. Those people you see who are 40 and look 60? They smoke and don't get enough sleep.
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I wonder how many of those who had strokes had high blood pressure, or other risk factors not mentioned (not sleeping while high?). Knowing how many smoked, did drugs, had high sodium diets, etc. might give more meaning to the numbers. Since strokes aren't always fatal, blood pressure checks comparing survivors with the general population might be statistically useful. Do people that get laid before sleep have fewer strokes? They probably sleep better. I guess that might count as having more exercise t
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Well, the study didn't say that sleeping more lessens the chances of stroke. It could be that the factors that cause stroke also cause one to get less sleep. If that were the case, lack of sleep would still be related to stroke, even though there would be no direct causation between them. Still, it's been my experience (sample size of one, I know) that not getting enough sleep does adversely affect health. Mine, anyway. It also affects my cognitive abilities (this has been studied and the studies confirm it
Snooze fest (Score:2)
The SLEEP 2012 was a total snooze fest.
Stupid sleep lobby (Score:5, Funny)
Always trying to get us to sleep more, they only want you to sleep more so they can keep making their fat profits at your expense.
Wake up sheeple!
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BUY! SLEEP! OBEY!
increase wasn't apparent in overweight (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting! Could it be that using the BMI as a determining factor in who is healthy and who is not is in itself a flawed concept? Perhaps the amount of sleep needed is related to caloric intake, and the caloric intake necessary to maintain a BMI less than 25 is not sufficient to avoid stroke? Certainly there is more here than meets the eye. I'd strongly recommend much further study before anyone changes their lifestyles due to this study.
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Interesting! Could it be that using the BMI as a determining factor in who is healthy and who is not is in itself a flawed concept?
Like one of the above posters said: I'd put my bets on high BMI already being such a big factor in strokes that it drowns out the lack of sleep effect.
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But this is serious stuff! What do I tell my patients? That if you are 6'0 and weigh 185lbs you will live on average 70yrs but if you are 6'0 180lbs you will live on average 72yrs? And then, if you die at 70 you will be mentally and physically intact but at 72 you won't? Seriously, I'm just looking for some hard numbers and data here.
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The evenness of the cutoff's in standard BMI interpretation (nice, round numbers like 25 and 30) is a really good clue that these are not scientifically-validated numbers. There are a lot of studies on BMI vs. mortality; here's a peer-reviewed article in the Canadian Medical Association Journal [www.cmaj.ca], and a crucial slide [www.cmaj.ca]. Note that the model-derived curve supports the usual interpretation that BMI in the 18.5-25 range is optimal; the bars showing actual data, though, show that BMI between 27 and 28 is optimal.
A summary recommendations for your patients: for men, BMI of 23-30 looks healthy. For women, BMI of 18.5-30 looks healthy.
For all patients (as I am sure you already know): exercise! The data showing health benefits from even moderate exercise are compelling, and exercising more is better for you, within a very broad range.
[Sorry - I just accidantally posted the text above as Anonymous Coward - not my intention.]
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Not really, because you haven't cited data, and the methodology used to support it, that demonstrates that a person 0.1% over the BMI is at more risk than a person who is normal BMI and vice-a-versa. This a life alterating subject being discussed here so please treat it a such. Maybe first would should start with why a BMI of 24.9 is more healthy than one of 25, and then continue with why a BMI of 18.5 is more healthy than one of 25? Really, all I'm asking for is the date to support the argument being made
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Of course using the BMI to determine anything is a flawed concept. The BMI in itself is not scientific, and is based on pseudoscience, working off ~130ish year old models for something that it didn't even work for properly in the first place.
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Yes. There is such a thing as "too thin".
Body systems shut down.
Not getting enough fat in your diet does bad things to you.
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Or not caloric intake per se, but perhaps e.g. protective fatty acids, which are usually found in trace amounts in western diets, so a large caloric intake is required to get sufficient quantities. Or any number of other possibilities.
Versus segmented sleep? (Score:5, Interesting)
TFA, at least, doesn't even mention segmented sleep [goo.gl] or how that might alter this alleged dynamic. Since there seems to be irrefutable evidence that the Industrial Age is the specific cause of this change in our sleep patterns and a prescriptive (if subconscious) effort to pigeonhole our sleep into one neat temporal compartment, why do these supposed experts continue to promote the Industrial Age myth of a single eight-hour sleep cycle? Why don't they consider the possibility that it might be our efforts as a civilization to force our sleep patterns into a single tightly regimented box that is causing the increased risk of stroke and other problems?
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sleeping outside the box...
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Snoopy slept outside the box before it was cool. (on top of, to be precise)
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Because not having a single eight-hour sleep cycle would be highly inconvenient in a post-industrial age, and therefore changing it is not an option, whether it affects your health or not.
It was (and is) always an option for me. I often sleep a few hours at night and then another few hours in the afternoon. Gives me a nice stretch of quiet, undisturbed time through the first half of the night and I feel fresh all the time I'm awake. Never could stand the 16h+ stretch over the day since I was mindlessly tired half of the time anyway.
Causation and Correlation Strikes Again (Score:2)
"Attention, busy middle-aged folks. You may be healthy and thin, but if you habitually sleep less than six hours a night, you still could be boosting your risk of a stroke."
That sure grabs a headline, but seriously. What proof do you have that that is the cause? What if there's something broken elsewhere, that we don't know about? That's not nearly as sensational enough for Mainstream Media, though.
Hmmm... (Score:4, Interesting)
I wouldn't have expected getting more or less sleep to affect the structural integrity of some unlucky blood vessel in your brain. Are there any clues about why such a dramatic effect might occur?
Re:Hmmm... (Score:4, Interesting)
Are there any clues about why such a dramatic effect might occur?
I have high blood pressure, and monitor it daily. If I don't get enough sleep my BP is higher. If I pull an all nighter (get zero sleep) my BP will go up by 20 points. For someone who already has high BP, that is enough to cause a stroke.
Little biased wouldn't you say (Score:2)
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However, I've been told that there are other activities that wear out mattresses more quickly than sleeping -- perhaps their corporate research dollars would be better spent on studies which find that those activities are good for your health.
(Although, rumor has it that at least one party to such activities tends to go to sleep quickly thereafter -- so perhaps this study is complementary to such additional studies.)
Of course, the mattress com
I'm on borrowed time (Score:2)
That must be a quiet meeting.
And why can't they sleep? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a chicken-and-egg mystery. Concluding that the health risk is because of bad sleep is just a statistically qualified conclusion.
People often cannot sleep because of a lot of different problems. Most of them are diffuse, and sadly often treated by medicines that just help you sleep or similar.
Finding the cause of why you can't sleep is very time consuming and often impossible by current technology, unless you believe Dr House is a representative of the average doctor.
The heart is a muscle like any other; it needs to have a break. This is called sleep and should last at least 5-6 hours every day. When you cannot sleep, it might be because the circulation of blood is somehow hindered, or something else sending warning signals to our brain that something is wrong. Thus one gets alert and one cannot sleep.
If one has trouble sleeping over a long period, the heart muscle gets tired. A very dangerous situation likely to end in a stroke.
(Mind you, I am not a doctor.)
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Nice. You reacted.
There are vast studies of the pulse lowering when you sleep. Thus heart resting.
There are also studies that shows that people with a higher pulse than their normal average is more likely having a death risk if they do not manage to get their pulse lowered to their previous average.
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Spikes? (Score:2)
So if you reduce your sleep time even more, the risk of stroke decreases?
Thank God (Score:1)
Stroke Risk Spikes In Healthy Adults Who Don't Get Enough Sleep
Thank God I'm an unhealthy adult who doesn't get enough sleep.
pick your poison (Score:1)
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Coffee (Score:2)
Why they always look at secondary effects? (Score:1)
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The main cause of stroke is lack of blood to the brain. Reducing blood pressure can actually cause a stroke because it reduces the cerebral perfusion pressure.
Now that... (Score:2)
... sounds like something anyone could lose sleep over.
SLEEP and USENIX both at Boston Sheraton this week (Score:1)
Is someone from Usenix sneaking into the Sleep panels? Come-on, fess up... ;-)
Four hours for a man (Score:2)