Sleep is one of the most neglected aspects of health for most athletes. Not getting a good night’s sleep can not only affect performance but it can also impact your gains in the gym. Sleep deprivation is a stressor which affects many body systems. Sleep deprivation has been found to result in increased blood pressure via sympathetic activation and, consequently, an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. This physiological disturbance could be attributed to increased levels of stress hormones (i.e. catecholamines and cortisol), arising from an increased sympathetic activity.
Studies in volunteers who slept short versus long hours show that sleep reduction was accompanied by increased hunger, higher circulating concentrations of the appetite-stimulating hormone, ghrelin, and reduced levels of the weight loss hormone, leptin.
To determine whether sleep restriction suppresses the effects of a reduced-calorie diet on excess adiposity, researchers had subjects follow a similar diet but differed the duration of sleep. One group slept 8½ hours per night while the other group slept 5½ hours.Advertisement
Sleep restriction decreased the fraction of weight loss of fat by 55% and increased the loss of fat-free body mass by 60%. In summary, dieting adults getting 5½ hours of sleep produced a catabolic state characterized by reduced loss of body fat and increased the loss of fat-free body mass, accompanied by increased hunger and changes in energy expenditure and the neuroendocrine control of substrate utilization. The findings should make bodybuilders aware that cutting back on sleep while dieting can not only cause a catabolic state but can also hinder fat loss gains.
In the latest Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness reported even more shocking news as to the severity of a single night of sleep loss.
This month’s research paper titled, “One night of partial sleep deprivation increased biomarkers of muscle and cardiac injuries during acute intermittent exercise” is raising the eyebrows of researchers and athletes alike on how even a single night of sleep can damage a lifter’s gains.
Researchers evaluated the effect of two types of partial sleep deprivation on biomarkers of muscle and cardiac injuries in response to acute intermittent exercise in professional athletes. Ten healthy male Taekwondo athletes were asked to perform the intense exercise in three conditions, allowing a 36 hour recovery period in between:
i) following a full night of regular sleep known as
a reference sleep night;
ii) following partial sleep deprivation at the beginning of the night, and
iii) following partial sleep deprivation at
the end of the night.
At the end of the study, one night of partial sleep deprivation had no effect on heart rate during exercise. More concerning was that all biomarkers related to muscle and cardiac injuries were altered by exercise. Likewise, compared to restful, night’s sleep, partial sleep deprivation increased markers of muscle damage but increasing creatine phosphokinase and myoglobin levels in response to exercise in the evening of the following day. The present study indicates that partial sleep deprivation increases the resting markers of muscle damage (i.e. CRP and MYO levels) and that the two types of partial sleep deprivation increase the CPK and MYO levels in response to acute intermittent exercise, in the evening of the following day. However, no rise of the physiological responses has been observed after the two types of partial sleep deprivation at rest and in response to the exercise.
Arbi Mejri M, Yousfi N, Hammouda O, Tayech A, Ben Rayana MC, Driss T,
Chaouachi A, Souissi N. One night of partial sleep deprivation increased
biomarkers of muscle and cardiac injuries during acute intermittent exercise. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2016 Feb 11.
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Irwin M, Thompson J, Miller C, Gillin JC, Ziegler M. Effects of sleep and sleep deprivation on catecholamine and interleukin-2 levels in humans: clinical implications. 1999. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 84: 1979–1985.