In a recent study published in npj Digital Medicine, researchers found that whether or not you go to bed on time could also have an effect on your health.
They examined the correlation between bedtime regularity and resting heart rate (RHR) and found that individuals going to bed even 30 minutes later than their usual bedtime presented a much higher resting heart rate that lasted into the following day.
An increase in resting heart rate means an increased risk to heart health.
The study is from the University of Notre Dame. One author is Nitesh Chawla.
Scientists have stressed the importance of healthy sleep habits, recommending at least seven hours each night, and have linked lack of sleep to an increased risk in numerous health conditions, including diabetes, stroke and heart disease.
In the study, the team analyzed data collected via Fitbit from 557 college students over the course of four years. They recorded 255,736 sleep sessions—measuring bedtimes, sleep and resting heart rate.
Big increases in RHR were observed when people went to bed anywhere between one and 30 minutes later than their normal bedtime.
Normal bedtime was defined as the one-hour interval surrounding a person’s median bedtime. The later they went to bed, the higher the increase in RHR. Rates remained elevated into the following day.
The team found that even if people get seven hours of sleep a night, if they are not going to bed at the same time each night, not only does their resting heart rate increase while they sleep, it carries over into the next day.
Surprisingly, going to bed earlier than one’s standard bedtime also showed signs of increasing RHR, though it depended on just how early.
Going to bed 30 minutes earlier than usual appeared to have little effect while going to bed more than a half-hour earlier strongly increased RHR. In cases of earlier bedtimes, however, RHR leveled out during the sleep session.
The team says the body clock, medications, and lifestyle factors all come into play when it comes to healthy sleep habits, but it’s vital to consider consistency as well.
If you care about heart health, please read studies about this stuff in drinking water may harm your heart structure and findings of big fluctuations in these 4 things linked to heart disease, stroke.
For more information about heart disease and your health, please see recent studies about why some people younger than 50 have heart attacks and results showing that many people with heart disease miss out this important care.
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