The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett

Most Replayed Moment: The Link Between Weight Gain and Sleep! Are Sleep Trackers Harmful Or Helpful?

9d ago40:105,374 words
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Dr Guy Leschziner is a consultant neurologist, sleep physician, and author who specialises in the science of sleep, circadian rhythms, and the hidden ways our brains shape our nights. In today’s mome...

Transcript

EN

You mentioned earlier that when people don't get enough sleep, the chance of ...

and weight gaining creases. How does that happen? What's the mechanism?

β€œSo, there are probably many mechanisms, but one of the ones that is best understood is that”

we know that when you're sleep deprived or, indeed, when your sleep is disrupted by anything else like, for example, a sleep app, there are changes that occur in terms of hormone levels of hormones that regulate our appetite and our satiety. And so, even if single night of sleep deprivation can result in a dramatic increase in your calorie intake overnight, there have been some studies done, for example, in nurses. So, there was a study

done that followed up nurses for 18 years and they looked at their weight and how much they slept on a regular basis. And what they found is that those nurses that were sleeping

in less than about six hours at a night on a regular basis. First of all, started off

at the beginning of that 18 year period at a slightly higher weight, but over the course of those 16 years, 18 years, they put on much more weight than other groups. So, there is a very clear correlation between sleep, duration, sleep quality and weight gain. We see that for example, in individuals who we treat with sleep apnea. So, one of the treatment for sleep apnea is a mask-like device that you wear that stops your airway from closing down at

night. And for some very overweight individuals, actually, when you treat that sleep apnea, they do manage to successfully lose weight, where in the past they found it absolutely impossible

to do so. Okay, so if I'm undistlect, I'm more likely to eat more calories than

next day. Yes. And I also more likely to reach for foods that are high in sugar and bad

β€œfor me. Certainly, some studies do suggest that. I think it's also important to say that”

sleep disruption or sleep deprivation has some fundamental effects, for example, on your glucose tolerance, so your insulin resistance, which of course is a particular issue for people with diabetes, but it affects us all. So, if you're very sleep deprived, there are changes to the way that not only your appetite or what you're reaching for, but also how your body processes the breakdown of those food stuff. Interesting. Because I anecdotally, I think I can

clearly say that if I'm undistlect and much more likely to eat something that is high in sugar or... Well, I think we can all testify to that, can't we? I think everybody has known that situation where they're very sleep deprived and they think, "Oh, well, I just need a bit of chocolate," or, you know, "What was going on in the brain, though? What was that? Is it something to do with the Amygdala and the prefrontal cortex, the like the emotional

β€œcentre of our brain?" And, yeah, I don't think we know. I think it's probably to do with”

the reward mechanisms that underlie our behaviors that there is something about sleep deprivation that alters the rewards that we're seeking, but I don't think I can give you a clear answer on that. You also talked about circadian rhythms. If I, if I was a ten year old, what do I need to understand about the circadian rhythm, what it is, what it does, and why it's important? So, within pretty much every cell of our bodies, there is this

24-hour clock. And, in fact, if you take a single cell and stick it in a petri dish, about 40% of the genes within that cell will exhibit this sort of 24-hour cycle. And, that 24-hour cycle really controls pretty much every biological system within our bodies. It's how our liver works, how our heart works, how our lungs work. There is one particular area of the brain called the supercosmatic nucleus that is viewed as the master clock. It's

the clock that coordinates all the other clocks within our bodies. And, that influences not only all of these other clocks that are occurring within the cells throughout our bodies, but influences our behavior as well. So, influences generally speaking when we feel tired and when we want to go to bed and when we wake up and also influences things like, you know, when we feel most mentally alert, when we want to eat, when we want to drink, when

we feel most able to cope with work for example. Now, that circadian rhythm, that circadian clock for most people, confers the sleep onset of somewhere between 10 p.m. and midnight, if you're an adult, and waking up somewhere between 6 and 8 a.m. Now, the timing of that body clock is governed by two things. It's governed by our genetics, so whether or

Not we are genetically predetermined to be slightly later in terms of our bod...

earlier, and we see that in families where lots of people, with, for example, will say, well,

you know, I've always gone to bed late and woke up late, but so as my father says, my grandfather,

et cetera, et cetera. But it's also influenced by what's happening in our environment, about 50% of the definers of our circadian clock, or governed by what's going on around us, be that

β€œin terms of when we're exposed to light. So we know that light is a very important driver of our”

circadian rhythm when we're eating, when we're exercising, when we're doing a whole range of other activities, and also one of the markers of our circadian rhythm is the discretion of melatonin. So there's a very small gland in the center of our brain, called the pineal gland, which secretes a hormone called melatonin, that hormone tends to start being secreted in most people at around 6 o'clock in the evening. It peaks at the time that we want to go to sleep,

and then it's not spropping down a few hours before we wake up. It's almost a chemical marker of our circadian rhythm. But we also know that giving people melatonin, in tablet form, for example, can influence our circadian rhythm. So there's this sort of feedback loop between our own bodies, secretion of melatonin, and what our super charismatic nucleus, our master clock, is doing. So by giving people melatonin at particular times of the day,

we can shift your circadian rhythm forward or back. So that master clock in the brain, where is it positioned? The super cosmetic nucleus is in a small area of the brain called the the hypothalamus. And it's that link to the eye. There are links from the back of the eye to the hypothalamus. So there are some cells in the back of the eye, in the retina, that are not involved in vision, not involved in conscious vision. But what they are involved with

is detecting blue light in particular, which is the part of the spectrum of light that is

most important in terms of regulating our circadian clock. And there are direct links between

these cells that are called retinal ganglion cells. And the super cosmetic nucleus. So exposure to light to blue light in particular is really very important in reinforcing or adjusting our circadian rhythm. Now, of course, we live in a world whereby the seasons change. And the amounts of light that we're exposed to changes. So if we were on a set rhythm all the time that was immovable and adjustable, then there would be times where our circadian rhythm might

not be, might might be odds with our environment. So there does need to be some slight adjustment of that circadian rhythm. And light is probably the most important adjuster. Blue light is that the light that comes from my smartphone. So blue light, obviously, the strongest source of blue light is sun. But yes, these kinds of devices, your smartphone, your iPad, in front of you,

β€œa range of electronic devices also have blue light within them. So that's why if I'm up on my”

phone to one end in the morning, staring into the screen, I'm kind of tricking that sort of optic nerve, which is then impacting my master clock. And I'm telling it that it's a different time. Yeah, so the thinking on that has changed a little bit over the last year. So it was said that using these devices will trigger insomnia as a result of blue light. Actually, it's likely that the amount of blue light that these devices put out is probably insufficient to do that directly.

But there are two effects of using your gadget until 1 a.m. The first is on a long term,

basically, if you're doing that regularly, it will result in an adjustment of your circadian clock and push it back. So you will want to go to bed a little bit later and wake up a little bit later, which is fine. If you're self-employed or you don't have any restrictions on your time, but most of us need to be up at a certain time in the morning. And if you're circadian, rhythm is delayed significantly, the net effect of that is that you're going to end up

sleep deprived. I mean, there's also the issue of being on Twitter or being engrossed in a in a movie on Netflix at 1 a.m. that is going to make you delay sleep anyway. So there are those two effects. It's arousing. It's arousing and it grips your attention. Well, what do you make of these people? I'm leaving one of them that watch serial killer

β€œmovies when we fall asleep. Well, I think that that's only an issue if it's stopping you from”

falling asleep. Do you see, because I have this argument a lot with my partner, she can't understand why I need to watch this like really stimulating stuff when I fall asleep. She likes quiet and I need to, I tell myself, I need to listen to something. Do you see variants in this kind of thing and is there a better approach or that this comes down to an individualised approach to sleep?

That's why I'm always very reluctant to say, this is the perfect night's sleep.

the rules for sleep. You know, for example, there are some people who, for whom caffeine doesn't

really influence their sleep and can have a double espresso and now before bed and still have no problems getting off to sleep. For most of us, that's not the case. If you are somebody who can watch something very stimulating, very scary and then switch it off and roll over and go off to sleep,

β€œthen I guess that's not a problem for you. For most people, that's probably not the best thing to”

be doing at night. I think that long term, one of the issues is with all of these kinds of activities in bed at night before you go off to sleep, is that they weaken the psychological associations between bed and sleep. And so if you start associating bed being a place where you're

mentally active, where you're engaged, then if you have an underlying predisposition to

insomnia, for example, then that can sometimes set the stage for developing insomnia later on. The average person that you've treated worked with in your clinical practice that's struggling with sleep is at the heart of the issue, just pause with sleep hygiene, like you've said there, because I've got so many friends that say to me that they struggle with their sleep, many of them have struggled with it for years. And I doubt that there's some sort of genetic reason why this many people are

β€œstruggling with sleep. So imagine it's just some kind of behavioral reason. So I think that the”

genes that predisposed to insomnia are a pretty widespread, but obviously, you know, in pretty much all areas of medicine, there is an interaction between genetics and environment. And certainly poor sleep hygiene, and that's a horrible term. I hate that term, but it's the term that is most widely used and understood. Concertingly put in place certain aspects of behavior that then can give rise to chronic insomnia in the long term. So if you've got very bad chronic insomnia,

then suddenly putting good sleep hygiene in place, it's unlikely to fix it, but it may be

that that poor sleep hygiene in the first instance gave rise or at least predisposed you to

developing insomnia. And what is poor sleep hygiene? If I wanted to be the worst possible sleeper in the world, what would I have to do? So I think you would probably have to set up your home office in your bedroom. You'd have to have, you know, your TV on in your bedroom all the time, have be surrounded by electronic devices, drink a lot of coffee late in the evening, alcohol, drinks a little bit of alcohol. So alcohol in the short term, of course, is

quite sedating. It's a central nervous system deprescent, but it does dramatically worse than the quality of your sleep. And for various reasons, the direct chemical effect, fact that you've got a full bladder, fact that you're probably snoring a little bit more. So alcohol's not a good thing. You know, not having a wind down period. So, you know, gambling on the stock market until 1 a.m. switching your laptop and then trying to go to bed,

those kinds of things. So that's, you know, the quintessential very, very bad sleep hygiene. What about when I eat? So, you know, eating is perhaps less important, but avoiding a very large carbohydrate meal, carbohydrate, rich meal before you go to bed for two reasons. One is that we know that it can cause some fluctuations in terms of your blood sugar. And also, if you've got a bit

β€œof reflux, it can make that much worse. Okay. What about sleeping in bed with somebody else?”

Well, I think that for some people, they've, and again, this goes back to no one rule for everybody. You know, if you've got a sleep trait term, sleep reactivity, which is where your sleep is very liable to your environment, then obviously sleeping next to somebody who's snoring loudly or who gets up in the middle of the night two or three times to, to your innate can be, can be very disruptive to your sleep. If you've got very little sleep reactivity, you may actually

find it comfortable, more comfortable to sleep with somebody in the same bed as you. I was, I was thinking of the day, because it where I've currently moved into. There's no blind so curtains in the bedroom. And I was wondering if that might be a good thing. Because it at least means that in terms of my circadian rhythm, I'm waking up at the same time every day. Because I'm waking up when the sun comes up. Yeah, but the sun comes up at different times

on different days, firstly. So if you were doing that routinely, you might find yourself really rather sleep- arrived in the summer months. And also there is some emerging evidence that exposure to light at night in your sleep is not very good for you. So there was a very recent study that implied that light exposure at night increases your risk of diabetes. So it certainly is not

Good for the quality of your sleep.

light, you'll wake up now or so after it's got light during that hour or so it may have

had a negative impact on the quality of your sleep. So having a dark bedroom is really part of good sleep hygiene, as it's having a quiet bedroom that is not too hot or too cold.

β€œWhat if you wear a sleep mask? That's not so good. Yes, it does. I mean, I wear a sleep mask. I think”

it's, you know, particularly if you don't have good blackout curtains or blinds in your bedroom, using a sleep mask, particularly in the summer months is probably very helpful indeed. Does that mean that the only light receptors we have are behind our eyes? Well, I think that there were some rumours on the internet that there were light receptors elsewhere, but certainly the only ones that we know to be of significance in terms of defining

or circadian rhythm are the ones in our retinous. Because I did psychology when I was in secondary school and I remember reading one of the psychology books, maybe my psychology teacher told me this, I think it was Mrs. Louney, that there were some studies where they shine the light underneath someone's knees and people would like wake up when they shine the lights there.

β€œI think that's been that's been very much discounted now. It is a bit strange though that the”

only light receptor would be behind the eyes. It just feels like, I don't know, feels like poor design. That there's only one place where we figure out if it's night or day. So you see that for example in people who've lost their sight. So in some individuals who have lost their sight completely, then they lose the regulation of their circadian rhythm and they develop circadian rhythm disorders, something called a non-24 hour rhythm disorder whereby their circadian rhythm

is on a, for example, a 25 hour cycle. And so every night they will go to bed one hour later than they did the previous night and will go right the way around the clock, you know, every month or so. So you know, that's a very good piece of evidence that actually it's those cells in the

in the retina that are of crucial importance for maintaining the stability of our circadian rhythm.

I've wrote that down it. I've read done in one recent study, 40% of totally blind individuals had a non-24 hour circadian rhythm which really kind of for me also highlights just how important it is to think about my circadian rhythm and how much impact it's having on my whole body. The other part you mentioned was the biological element to our circadian rhythms which which people refer to as chronotypes. Yes. And this idea of chronotypes which is essentially from my understanding

that genetically we will have a slight sort of disposition to sleep in at certain times, yeah, and to wake up at certain times. Yeah. So there's these names right there's like the owl,

β€œthe lark or whatever else. I think I'm in an hour but that also could just be bad habits.”

Yeah. So certainly there's that sort of genetic predisposition. There's also these environmental factors but there's also age in that are circadian rhythm changes a little bit as we go through different stages of life. So, you know, it's not at all uncommon for teenagers to become more evening chronotypes and then as we get older we tend to shift back to the morning. So that's part and parcel of our aging biology as well. So I think that, you know, genetics is really

important but so are other factors as well. Studies and twins suggest that up to 50% of our chronotype is under genetic control. So does that suggest that we are likely to have a similar chronotype to our family? We are likely too but obviously our environment is not going to be exactly the same as our parents or you know what we do. Our behaviors are not going to be identical to our parents or our siblings. So yes we've more frequently see that for example people have a

evening chronotype that runs in families but that doesn't mean that you know look we're more than just the destiny of the genes that we hold. Obviously our genes are really important but so are other factors as well. If someone came to you and they said I'm struggling with my sleep. You know, multiple mates in the world haven't been able to sleep, I'm getting in bed and nothing's happening and then I'm waking up and I'm just sat there thinking about sleeping and I feel horrific. Where would

you start? So I would start, I think, by trying to understand what it is that is causing their sleep issues because a lot of the individuals that I see who have been referred in with that

sort of picture assume that they've got insomnia and they may not always have insomnia. So I think

a key issue is that we are really, really poor witnesses to our own sleep and what I mean by that is that

We often are experience of sleep is very different to the reality of sleep wh...

into the sleep laboratory. It's not at all unusual and I will almost always ask this question

when I'm going through a sleep study with one of my patients is how much sleep do you think you

β€œgot over the course of that night and it's not at all unusual for people to say to me well I think”

I've got two or three hours sleep occasionally even they say well I didn't sleep at all and then you look at their brain waves you look at the best objective marker that you've got of their sleep and you see that they've slept seven and a half a hours. So obviously what people are experiencing is really important because ultimately from my perspective I want to improve people's experience of their sleep and what it is that they're complaining of but it's important to

understand that what they're telling you may not necessarily be the objective truth. Now that's

really important when it comes to insomnia because it's not unusual for me to see individuals who

you know they give you a story of very clear insomnia but actually when you look at their sleep objectively you find that although they say they haven't slept tall they've slept

β€œseven hours but that seven hours has been completely disrupted by conditions like periodic”

limb movement disorder which is this these leg kicks associated with the rest of the legs syndrome or sleep acne for example now sometimes it's very evident from what people tell you that actually that's not the case that they've just got very clear insomnia. So so that's really the starting point to try and decide whether or not you feel confident enough in your clinical evaluation of them that that you know what the issue is without doing a sleep study and if you

think that they do need a sleep study then that's the point of which we are we arrange for that. It's also trying to understand some of the factors that might be driving their sleep difficulty so for example was there were there sleep difficulties triggered by a life event did they have sleep reactivity before this insomnia started so were they one of those individuals who could sleep anywhere anytime whatever they wanted whenever they wanted to put

their head down or were they kind of individual who the night before an exam before a job interview before a presentation would lose sleep because that often is a very strong market for developing in insomnia later on in life and then it's also about trying to understand how the rest of their health is impacted by their sleep but also how the rest of their health impact on sleep so it's not at all unusual for me to see individuals who have been started on medications for other

reasons that have generated sleep issues for example. You talked about this sort of obsession with sleep and I was wondering in the case of the patient you've just described would you encourage

them to wear a sleep tracker. So first all I have to say that I'm not ideologically opposed to

β€œsleep trackers in general I think that they are really really good for example in research.”

You know fantastic for research it allows us to track sleep in very very large numbers of individuals and try and work out how that correlates with whatever we're interested in. One of the major issues with sleep trackers is that the people who often use sleep trackers are individuals who already are concerned about their sleep. So if you know that you're sleeping relatively little and you wake up feeling tired then you probably know you're not sleeping enough.

You don't necessarily need a sleep tracker to tell you that. If you're one of these individuals who has insomnia, who is spending plenty of time in bed but it's simply cannot get the amount of sleep that they need. Then what a sleep tracker will do is it'll increase your concern your anxiety around your sleep. It's a very different picture from for example using a step tracker. If you're sitting on the sofa and you look at your step tracker and you realise you've only done

whatever it is, 5000 steps. It's very easy to get up and go for a walk and do another 5000 steps. If your sleep tracker is telling you you slept really badly and you know you slept really badly and you're already worried about how badly you sleep. There's nothing that you can do on the basis of the information that your sleep tracker is giving you to suddenly go and get a little bit more sleep. And it's complicated by the fact that sleep tracker is a pretty good at telling you how much time

you spent in bed. There reasonably good at telling you how quickly you dropped off to sleep. The reliability, the accuracy of these devices, most of these devices, drops off significantly when it comes to for example defining nighttime awakenings, defining stages of sleep, those kinds of things. So then you have that additional issue in the mix which is that sometimes the your sleep tracker may be giving you information that is not factually correct

and that may increase your anxiety further. So I'm really very very keen for people who have

Issues with their sleep rather than just burning the candle at both ends to p...

tracker and actually go and have a chat with their GP or somebody who knows a little bit about

sleep rather than relying on this sleep tracking technology. Do you think sleep trackers have had

β€œa negative or positive impact on sleep culture? I think that for those individuals who can”

fix their sleep in a very straightforward way by spending more time in bed. So the kinds of people that I talked about the 20 years ago would be saying, well, you know, I only sleep 5 hours and you know, because I'm busy doing X, Y and Z, and I can get away with it. I think it's probably encouraged them to spend a bit more time in bed because they know they have a very clear, very clear bit of information that's telling them they're not sleeping enough. But for the people

that I see, the people who are already concerned about their sleep and who have difficulties with their sleep, I think it's been a very negative impact. And I have some reservations about, well, people like myself, sitting on these kinds of podcasts or writing in newspapers telling you, well, you know, if you don't get enough sleep, you're going to die early, you're going to have all these negative health consequences because for a subgroup of individuals who are already very concerned

about their sleep that actually can get worse problems. And I have seen individuals who, for example, have read books on sleep and how important it is is, on sleep, who have ended up going into a spiral of insomnia and very catastrophic depression and anxiety as a result. So it's very, you know, it's very important to be clear that all of this is a double-edged sword.

β€œIt's interesting with sleep trackers. I can see, I think it's worth me saying, that I am both”

an investor in a group and I'm also sponsored by a group, but I also agree with the things you've said. So I've seen this sort of variance in how a sleep tracker can improve some people's lives and it can make other people more anxious in a way that's not helpful. So for me, my sort of testimony on it is, I was one of those people you described earlier that thought sleep was taken or leave it. And when I started seeing a sleep tracker, it's kind of like that when I saw

my brain for the first time, I did a brain scan and I didn't even kind of like realize it was there and that I could influence it and that things I was doing without really thinking much were having this big impact. And for me what it did is it allowed me to finally make this link between how much sleep I've had and then how I behave. Now I thought my behaviour was random. But seeing that when my sleep scores were down, I was way more emotional, I was way more likely to eat crap.

And the other thing that I saw which was really interesting was that when I had a glass of wine or

two glasses of wine, three glasses of wine, that it just like destroyed my sleep. And I never knew

that before and I was in search of reasons to quit alcohol anyway. And when I saw that, I quit alcohol forever. So I've not drunk since. So, and then for me, I have to also say, there are moments in my life where life happens and I know I'm not going to sleep and I don't pay attention to my sleep tracker. But there are other moments where I have a bit more control and that's when I've kind of chewed into my sleep tracker. I've also had parents message me a lot and say, listen, I've got a one-year-old

a two-year-old, a three-year-old, whatever. There's no point in me wearing a sleep tracker because listen, I'm not going to get any sleep. And I also completely agree with them that there's really no point in that situation. I think there's a point when there's something you can do about it. Yeah, and that's absolutely key. Yeah. So the point of doing anything like that is if there are very clear things that you can do on your own to close that loop. There's no point having

information without being able to act upon it. Yeah. And I guess if you are one of those individuals like yourself who very clearly can correlate certain things that they're doing in their daytime lives with their sleep and and how they feel subsequently, then then great. You know, I guess I have a little bit of bias in that the people that I see are already struggling with their sleep already. And so it goes but I guess we're completely in agreement.

Yeah, we are. Yeah, it's so interesting because that's been a developing idea because

obviously my bias is always like, you're rather no, because that's you know, but then

from doing this podcast I've I've seen the comments and I've seen the struggle in from speaking to parents that struggling with their sleep and it's kind of sometimes just makes them feel worse about it. I think nuance is necessary on this issue. What you just listened to was a most

β€œreplayed moment from a previous episode. If you want to listen to that full episode,”

I've linked it down below. Check the description. Thank you.

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