Lack of Sleep Puts You At Higher Risk For Colds, First Experimental Study Finds 86
sciencehabit writes: Moms and sleep researchers alike have stressed the importance of solid shuteye for years, especially when it comes to fighting off the common cold. Their stance is a sensible one—skimping on sleep weakens the body's natural defense system, leaving it more vulnerable to viruses. But the connection relied largely on self-reported, subjective surveys—until now (abstract). For the first time, a team of scientists reports that they have locked down the link experimentally, showing that sleep-deprived individuals are more than four times more likely to catch a cold than those who are well-rested.
Re:duh? (Score:4, Funny)
Jesus, we wouldn't get anywhere if the world were full of people like you.
Um...
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We'd be pretty far along on the carpentry stuff though. Cause you know, he kinda nailed it.
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Re:duh? (Score:5, Interesting)
Knowing it in principle and knowing when to put that knowledge to work are two different things.
I used to catch *everything* that was going around, including some things most other people didn't. I got sick three, maybe four times a year. I always put it down to having a lousy immune system, until in one checkup I mentioned to my doctor that I'm a pretty loud snorer. "Better have you checked for sleep apnea," he said, and sure enough I had it, although only a relatively mild case. He prescribed sleeping on a CPAP machine, and since I've been doing that I almost never get sick. Maybe once in four years.
Anecdotal evidence, I know, but my point is this. Now that there's research demonstrating the impact of sleep on immune system performance it makes sense to make questions about sleep quantity and quality a routine part of health surveillance. I just happened to mention snoring to my doctor on one visit; if I'd been asked twenty years earlier it would have saved my employers a lot of sick time and me a lot of misery.
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The point is that the relationship between sleep and the strength of the immune system has been well know and tested for years so it's obvious that if you have a stronger immune system that you would be more resilient to getting a cold.
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The point is that the relationship between sleep and the strength of the immune system has been well know and tested for years...
For a certain value of "well-known" and "tested". You could actually read the paper abstract and see what was novel about this particular study.
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Anecdotal evidence
Anecdotal evidence is evidence just like any other evidence.
No idea why americans believe otherwise.
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You can use different kinds of evidence different ways. Credible anecdotal evidence can disprove some things, or it can suggest other things, but for the most part can't prove that one thing causes another.
Example: Suppose my friend Larry gets lung cancer a few years after he quit smoking. This disproves the notion that if you quit smoking you are guaranteed not to get lung cancer. It suggests that smoking causes long-term damage to the cells of the lung. It doesn't prove that quitting smoking causes canc
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That is not an anecdotical evidence, it is no evidence at all.
If the official weather history says, Karlsruhe, the town I live hat its hottest day 9th and 13th of august in 2002 with a temperature of 40.2 degrees celsius.
However I measured on my balcony at a different date 48 degrees celsius. That is my evidence, it is anecdotical as it is only a "story" told by me. So typical american reaction: that anecdotical evidence is no evidence. However: I have a photo :D but without a date ... so?
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I got sick three, maybe four times a year.
That sounds pretty standard to me if you're just talking about colds.
My Theory (Score:1)
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And yet the average American gets too little sleep routinely.
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I blame cocaine and the Cartoon Network.
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anyone not know this already?.. it seems pretty obvious
Yeah, aren't you just sick and tired of articles about being tired and sick? To be fair, though, this was news to me: maybe I've read things like this before, but if so the concept probably just didn't sink in, what with all the fatigue-driven-illness I've been experiencing lately...
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anyone not know this already?.. it seems pretty obvious
Pretty obvious the world is flat too, but it's helpful to use the scientific method to confirm whether or not it actually is.
More Obvious Than That (Score:3)
anyone not know this already?.. it seems pretty obvious
Pretty obvious the world is flat too, but it's helpful to use the scientific method to confirm whether or not it actually is.
Actually, it's pretty obvious that the world is round if you have some basic math. Or stand up on a westward-facing beach and watch the sun set a second time. We've known the world was round since way before Columbus, it's just that we could do the math and knew it was WAY too far around the ocean to India to make it, so nobody else was stupid enough to try. Columbus was REALLY lucky there was a landmass in the middle.
However, in my experience the connection between colds and sleep is even more obvious.
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So what if they did? You're an idiot if you think we shouldn't be studying things that "everyone knows".
Count me in (Score:1)
Count me in as a data point. Every time I undersleep I get the sniffles. if I undersleep and am exposed to cold weather, it's game over. Every time I oversleep after getting those sniffles I get better, if not outright lose them. I also notice that other healing processes in my body work a lot better after getting good sleep. Headaches, ear aches, all sorts of minor maladies that I've had over the years (I'm 28).
This is also one more reason to hate public schools. The early morning starts are doing the chil
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I think the ultimate conclusion is that sleep is when the body performs full repair and maintenance, not just neuronal management confined to the braincase. Perhaps the metabolic changes that occur during sleep accelerate repair mechanisms in the rest of our organs as well. IANABiologist.
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Don't blame that entirely on the school system. Parents who let their children stay up late and don't make sure that they get enough sleep (Children need more sleep than adults do.) are just as much at fault, if not more so.
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Parents who let their children stay up late and don't make sure that they get enough sleep (Children need more sleep than adults do.) are just as much at fault, if not more so.
Absolutely agree that children need more sleep than adults. However, they are not necessarily able to fall asleep at the needed time to be ready for school. My parents sure as hell tried to get me to go to bed early, but I all I did after getting to bed is toss and turn for hours. I think a lot more children and adolescents are afflicted with delayed sleep phase disorder [wikipedia.org] than we think.
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Parents who let their children stay up late and don't make sure that they get enough sleep (Children need more sleep than adults do.) are just as much at fault, if not more so.
Absolutely agree that children need more sleep than adults. However, they are not necessarily able to fall asleep at the needed time to be ready for school. My parents sure as hell tried to get me to go to bed early, but I all I did after getting to bed is toss and turn for hours. I think a lot more children and adolescents are afflicted with delayed sleep phase disorder [wikipedia.org] than we think.
Maybe, but it helps if you don't let them have TVs, iPads or mobile phones in their rooms when they go to bed...
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As an adult, I have just had to learn that if I need to be up at 6 to go to work, I can't stay up until 3 and expect to feel anything but knackered all day.
Re:Better (Score:5, Insightful)
Turns out going outside when it's cold and wet pretty much never makes a difference [cvs.com] in the normal course of things. Hypothermia is the exception, and for the most part that means going outside cold, wet, and without much clothing for prolonged periods of time to the extent you're likely chattering the daylights out of your teeth.
This is an important finding since current parenting styles (at least in temperate areas of the US) often include keeping the kids inside much of the winter to prevent them from getting sick. The consequent lack of exercise and being in close quarters with disease vectors (other kids) yields the result of sick, fat kids. I tell my patients to send little Cindy and Juan outside with a good coat when it's cold and wet, unless the little buggers are going to slip on the ice or are shedding genuine tears of misery in a prolonged fashion, which I personally think is good advice for grown up nerds as well, present company included.
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No.
Yellow eye burns!
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Asthma is another exception, which is not mentioned in that article.
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I find this mostly true, some mixed causation... (Score:1)
Most of the colds I've encountered have made it significantly more difficult to sleep. That's actually why I'm home today - taking a rare sick day for an otherwise symtomless cold that just left me 'static-y' without letting me really sleep. No nagging mental troubles, no troubles previous nights, no cough, no caffeine or diet issues I could tell - just a steady heartbeat/mental state that wouldn't actually trigger a proper dream state all night. Had earplugs, sleeping mask, and a nice zen state to dismi
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>>Definitely seemed a physical thing rather than a physical one.
Meant phyical rather than a mental one. I must reiterate - I am rather sleepy today - still can't get a nap going, and am now in that stage of the day where it's better to wait for night at this point. Thus, slashdot.
Ryan Fenton
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Get some exercise. The sleep of a laboring man is sweet.
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Get some exercise. The sleep of a laboring man is sweet.
That's some facepalmy advice for a person with cold, especially if they have fever.
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If you sat in your office chair all day, then went home and binge watched Game of Thrones and tried to go to sleep you may not get good rest. But if you put of that last episode to go for a 30 minute jog, took a shower, then went to bed your body is much happier to get a good night's rest.
We're not meant to be sedentary creatures. That's what he was trying to say.
A sick person is supposed to get plenty of rest, however.
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This is not a proof. Does the 90 year old chain smoker disprove that cigarettes cause cancer?
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For many people, especially smokers who know such an individual personally, the answer is yes, it does disprove that cigarettes cause cancer. After all, if it doesn't happen with 100% replicability then it isn't real. Right?
The same is true for most everything else. If someone doesn't habitually consume toxins (tobacco, alcohol, whatever), eats well (lots of leafy greens and fruit in addition to meat and some grains), and exercises moderately and regularly -- but still gets sick and doesn't live to be 120 -
Melatonin (Score:4, Interesting)
Interested people might want to go read up on melatonin [wikipedia.org]: how it is produced most effectively, and what its effects are on health. Obviously, it is an area that still requires a lot of study to be conclusive, but I suspect that this hormone plays a large part in the effect demonstrated in this study.
No TV and No Beer make Homer something.. something (Score:1)
yup.
Up Next! (Score:2)
Up Next! Too much food can make you fat! Stay tuned.
Fighting the frizzies at 11.
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Perhaps I could get funding for a study to prove that imbibing liquids directly correlates to excretion of liquids...
Re:Up Next! (Score:5, Informative)
Up Next! Too much food can make you fat! Stay tuned.
Fighting the frizzies at 11.
Some of the most profound discoveries have come from experiments verifying established knowledge, yielding unexpected results. Rutherford's discovery of the atomic nucleus resulted from just such an experiment.
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Some of the most profound discoveries have come from experiments verifying established knowledge, yielding unexpected results. Rutherford's discovery of the atomic nucleus resulted from just such an experiment.
Wow, he was experimenting with colds and sleep and he accidentally the atomic bomb?
Old News (Score:2)
Here is an article [webmd.com] from 2010.
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Why is this on Slashdot? A computer website...
Slashdot's motto is"News for Nerds" and this does not refer purely to computer nerds. There were nerds before computers were even invented.
Yes! We all know that! (Score:1)
But our mothers, wives, girlfriends, employers, etc etc etc just won't listen! We need our beauty sleep. Up at the crack of noon.
As if... (Score:3)
Oh, wait...
For some people. (Score:1)
I love generalizations like this study. I'm a very short term sleeper. 2-4hrs/night average. Been like this my entire life (over 30yrs now). Last time I had a cold that put me in bed I was in high school. I cannot recall the last time I had one that kept me from a day of work. Last time I had the flu... I think I was 17. It's been so long it's difficult to recall now.
No doubt everything is on a bit of a curve. To say "everyone" is far to generalized.
Early to bed... (Score:3)
Lack of sleep puts you at risk for just about everything in the way of illness.
Go to bed, people. Don't look at any screens for at least a half-hour before you hit the pillow and it will help you fall asleep.
Sleep is wonderful. Get 8-9 hours if you can. The longer you sleep the more you'll dream and dreams (even nightmares) are crucial for good mental and physical health. In fact, some of the best days I've ever had seemed to come after a night with one of those nightmares where you wake up shouting, jumping off the bed and grasping the covers.
Artificial lighting has screwed us up a bit. If I could, I'd go to bed a few hours after dark and wake up at dawn every day. I do it during the summer, but where I live it gets dark pretty early in the winter.
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Might be related, but when I get sick I tend to sleep a lot. The last bout of Man Flu I got I only emerged from bed to seek food and sometimes medication.
But for me, the number 1 reason that I get sick is the fact I work in the middle of an open plan office (AKA an incubator). I get subject to every airborne illness that any other worker carries in, I swear they're actually fighting in a battle royale to determine which one
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The last bout of Man Flu I got I only emerged from bed to seek food and sometimes medication.
If you can still eat, it's not real Man Flu, it's just a cold.
Also, didn't you have to go to the bathroom?
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Also, didn't you have to go to the bathroom?
Not as much as you'd think.
Also, buckets are handy.
Damn these trifocals... (Score:2)
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I though it said "sheep".
Welsh? Kiwi?
Con Crud (Score:3)
more for the pre existing conditions list (Score:2)
more for the pre existing conditions list and you boss can hold it over you with the GOP wins
Well bob you can keep working the OT or we can get rid you and you will have a very hard time being able to pay for a doctor ever again.
First experimental study? (Score:1)
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For 14 consecutive days, they reported their sleep dura- tion and sleep efficiency (percentage of time in bed ac- tually asleep) for the previous night and whether they felt rested.
It isn't said to be the first study. Only the first one that didn't rely on self reporting of amount of sleep. They used monitors to measure their sleep before the administration of the cold virus, then they were kept in the lab and their sleep was again measured. Self reporting is pretty notorious for being incorrect.
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What about allergies? (Score:2)
Does lack of sleep affect that too? I noticed my body is more sensitive from them. :(
What worked for me . . . (Score:2)