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Poor
Sleep Linked To More Colds
Featured
Article
Main Category: Sleep / Sleep Disorders
/ Insomnia
Also Included In: Immune System / Vaccines;
Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses;
Flu / Cold / SARS
Article Date: 13 Jan 2009 - 0:00 PST
US
researchers found that people who slept
fewer than seven hours a night, and who
spent more of that time awake, were nearly
three times more likely to develop a cold
than people who had eight hours or more
of undisturbed sleep.
The
study was the work of Dr Sheldon Cohen,
of the Department of Psychology at Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
and colleagues, and was published in the
12 January issue of the Archives of Internal
Medicine.
Poor
sleep is thought to be a predictor of
low immunity, and thereby more readily
predisposing people to the common cold,
although there is no direct evidence tying
sleep quality in the weeks leading up
to exposure to the risk of infection.
The researchers said that studies had
also shown that people who slept between
seven and eight hours per night had the
lowest rates of heart disease, illness
and early death.
For
this study, which took place between 2000
and 2004, Cohen and colleagues examined
the links between sleep quality and sleep
duration in the weeks leading up to being
exposed to a cold virus, to the susceptibility
to catching it.
The
researchers recruited 153 healthy male
and female volunteers aged 21 to 55 years
and interviewed them every day for fourteen
days to find out how long they had slept
the previous night, how efficient their
sleep had been, that is what percentage
of the time in bed was actually spent
sleeping, and whether they felt rested.
The researchers then worked out the average
quantities of sleep duration and sleep
efficiency for each person for the 14
nights.
The
volunteers then went into quarantine and
took nasal drops containing the common
cold virus (rhinovirus). They were kept
under close observation for signs of a
cold during the day before their exposure
and for 5 days afterwards. They also gave
mucus samples during this observation
period, which were tested for virus cultures,
and 28 days or so later they gave a blood
sample that was tested for antibody response
to the cold virus.
Before
the 14 days of monitoring, each participant
also underwent a "pre-challenge"
examination, where the researchers obtained
information about potential confounders
such as virus-specific antibody levels
in their blood, demographics, body mass
index, psychological variables and health
behaviours.
The
results showed that:
The less a person slept, the more likely
he or she was to develop a cold (there
was a graded association between infection
rate and average sleep duration).
Participants
who slept fewer than 7 hours were 2.94
times more likely to develop a cold than
those who had 8 hours or more sleep.
The
more efficiently a person slept (more
of the time in bed actually spent asleep),
the less likely he or she was to develop
a cold (i.e. there was also a graded association
between sleep efficiency and rate of infection).
Participants
whose sleep efficiency feel below 92 per
cent were 5.50 times more likely to develop
a cold than those whose efficiency was
98 per cent or more.
Feeling
rested was not linked to rate of infection.
These
relationships could not be explained by
the potential counfounders such as levels
of virus-specific antibodies beforehand,
demographics, the season of the year,
body mass index, socioeconomic status,
health behaviours, and psychological variables.
Cohen and colleagues concluded that:
"Poorer
sleep efficiency and shorter sleep duration
in the weeks preceding exposure to a rhinovirus
were associated with lower resistance
to illness."
The
researchers also looked at separate components
of illness and how they linked to the
variables they measured.
"When
the components of clinical illness (infection
and signs or symptoms) were examined separately,
sleep efficiency but not sleep duration
was associated with signs and symptoms
of illness," they wrote, but "neither
was associated with infection."
"A
possible explanation for this finding
is that sleep disturbance influences the
regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines,
histamines and other symptom mediators
that are released in response to infection,"
they suggested, recommending that seven
to eight hours sleep a night would appear
to be a reasonable target.
The
editors noted that the study was supported
by the National Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute, by the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases and by
supplementary funds provided by the John
D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Network on Socioeconomic Status and Health.
"Sleep
Habits and Susceptibility to the Common
Cold."
Sheldon Cohen; William J. Doyle; Cuneyt
M. Alper; Denise Janicki-Deverts; Ronald
B. Turner.
Archives of Internal Medicine Vol. 169,
No. 1, pp 62-67, January 12, 2009.
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