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A blueprint for choosing the right fish oil supplement — filled with specific recommendations, guidelines for interpreting testing data, and dosage protocols.
Multiple stages of sleep have been identified, each with its own ascribed function. Rapid-eye-movement, or REM, sleep is a distinct phase of sleep characterized by eye movements similar to those of wakefulness. REM sleep occurs 70 to 90 minutes after a person first falls asleep and is essential for emotional well-being. On the other hand, deep, slow-wave sleep, which occurs during non-REM periods, provides a homeostatic recalibration of blood pressure, an essential element of cardiovascular health. In this clip, Dr. Matthew Walker describes how the different stages of sleep influence emotional and cardiovascular health.
Matt: But also I would say REM sleep, too, you know, I think REM sleep takes a backseat. At sort of, you know, a bit of a neglected stepsister in the sort of sleep conversation. REM sleep, we found all manner of different functions, one of which is emotional first-aid. It's incredible for palliative emotional benefit. It's not time that heals all wounds, but it's time during REM sleep that provides emotional convalescence.
Rhonda: I guess that would also then be important to help you sleep better, because if you are managing your emotions better, you probably have less anxiety...
Matt: Correct. Exactly. But also REM is for the body, too, you know. It seems to regulate cardiovascular function. So REM sleep is critical too.
Rhonda: Oh, really? Is REM what's important for lowering the blood pressure?
Matt: No. Well, it's during deep sleep that you get this lowering of blood pressure, and we've got some data right now that we're about to publish that deep sleep provides actually a homeostatic recalibration of blood pressure.
What do I mean by that? If I measure your blood pressure before sleep and then after sleep at a matched circadian time, so we remove the circadian fluctuation of which there is a large one to your systolic blood pressure, but we match it, and so the only thing that's different is the quality of your sleep, what we've discovered firstly is that the amount of deep sleep that you have measured in these big delta slow waves during deep non-REM sleep, that predicts how much of a drop in your systolic blood pressure you will have in the morning relative to the evening as if deep sleep provides a recalibration of the cardiovascular system.
Rhonda: Wow.
Matt: If you're having higher frequency brainwaves that are not like the deep sleep, that's what we call unrestorative sleep, if you have a ratio of very little deep brainwave activity and a lot of high-frequency wake-like brain activity, what we call delta-beta ratio, that predicts very bad cardiovascular outcomes, that if anything, your systolic blood pressure is even worse after sleep than it is the night before.
And what we found is that during aging, now we looked at this and healthy people, then we replicated in older adults, and we found that the older that you get, the less deep sleep that you get, the more sort of wake-like or faster-frequency brainwave activity, which isn't good during deep sleep. And that accurately predicts the cardiovascular dysfunction that we see in aging. So we now think we understand in part why poor sleep is linked into poor cardiovascular outcomes.
One of the benefits of sleep is that it resets cardiovascular tone and particularly systolic tone. It doesn't stop there. There's lots of other benefits, heart rate drops, etc. But REM sleep also seems to have this strange function where you go through these cycles where you get a massive activation of the cardiovascular system, and then it falls silent, and then a massive escalation again. And you get this really remarkable increase in heart rate variability.
And heart rate variability has been used as a metric of health outcome, that if you have high heart rate variability, it's very good. It predicts lots of health outcomes. That's what you get during REM sleep. So we should be careful not to think of everything being all about deep sleep. It's about all stages. Every stage of sleep that we have, we have ascribed a function to. Which makes sense, you know, during sleep...Sleep is the most idiotic of all things in terms of a creation from Mother Nature. You know, you're not finding a mate. You're not reproducing. You're not eating. You're not caring for your young. And worse of all, you're vulnerable to predation. So on any one of those grounds, sleep should have been strongly selected against in the course of evolution.
The exact opposite is true. Every species that we've studied to date sleeps. What that means is that sleeper has fought its way through heroically every step along the evolutionary pathway, which must mean that if sleep doesn't serve an absolutely vital function, it is the biggest mistake that the evolutionary process has ever made. And if any one of those stages of sleep could be removed, because it was not important, because I want to, you know, emphasize this type of sleep because that other sleep must not be important, I promise you, mother nature would have thought, I'm gonna excise that stage of sleep out because you're just too vulnerable.
But I think, in your position, of course I would be concerned about my deep sleep, thinking about things like APOE-4, Alzheimer's risk, too. But I think the bottom line is that no matter which way you slice the sleep pie, you just can't shortchange sleep.
A neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive memory loss, spatial disorientation, cognitive dysfunction, and behavioral changes. The pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease include amyloid-beta plaques, tau tangles, and reduced brain glucose uptake. Most cases of Alzheimer's disease do not run in families and are described as "sporadic." The primary risk factor for sporadic Alzheimer's disease is aging, with prevalence roughly doubling every five years after age 65. Roughly one-third of people aged 85 and older have Alzheimer's. The major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's is a variant in the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene called APOE4.
One of three common genetic variants of the APOE (apolipoprotein E) gene. The APOE4 allele, which is present in approximately 10-15% of people, increases the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease and lowers the age of onset. Having one copy of E4 increases risk 2- to 3-fold, while having two copies increases risk as much as 15-fold.
A phase of sleep characterized by slow brain waves, heart rate, and respiration. NREM sleep occurs in four distinct stages of increasing depth leading to REM sleep. It comprises approximately 75 to 80 percent of a person’s total sleep time.
A distinct phase of sleep characterized by eye movements similar to those of wakefulness. REM sleep occurs 70 to 90 minutes after a person first falls asleep. It comprises approximately 20 to 25 percent of a person’s total sleep time and may occur several times throughout a night’s sleep. REM is thought to be involved in the process of storing memories, learning, and balancing mood. Dreams occur during REM sleep.
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