I saw this article on Forbes News and decided to bring it here so that the readers of this blog will learn from it and will know the effects of someone skipping sleep.This idea of people working until late in the night and will not at least get up to 5 hours sleep is health and productivity killer according to the information's on Forbes.
According to the Division of Sleep Medicine at the Harvard Medical
School, the short-term productivity gains from skipping sleep to work
are quickly washed away by the detrimental effects of sleep deprivation
on your mood, ability to focus, and access to higher-level brain
functions for days to come. The negative effects of sleep deprivation
are so great that people who are drunk outperform those lacking sleep.
Why You Need Adequate Sleep to Perform
We’ve always known that sleep is good for your brain, but new
research from the University of Rochester provides the first direct
evidence for why your brain cells need you to sleep (and sleep the right
way—more on that later). The study found that when you sleep your brain
removes toxic proteins from its neurons that are by-products of neural
activity when you’re awake. Unfortunately, your brain can remove them
adequately only while you’re asleep. So when you don’t get enough sleep,
the toxic proteins remain in your brain cells, wreaking havoc by
impairing your ability to think—something no amount of caffeine can fix.
Skipping sleep impairs your brain function across the board. It slows
your ability to process information and problem solve, kills your
creativity, and catapults your stress levels and emotional reactivity.
What Sleep Deprivation Does to Your Health
Sleep deprivation is linked to a variety of serious health problems,
including heart attack, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and obesity. It
stresses you out because your body overproduces the stress hormone
cortisol when it’s sleep deprived. While excess cortisol has a host of
negative health effects that come from the havoc it wreaks on your
immune system, it also makes you look older, because cortisol breaks
down skin collagen, the protein that keeps skin smooth and elastic. In
men specifically, not sleeping enough reduces testosterone levels and
lowers sperm count.
Too many studies to list have shown that people who get enough sleep
live longer, healthier lives, but I understand that sometimes this isn’t
motivation enough. So consider this—not sleeping enough makes you fat.
Sleep deprivation compromises your body’s ability to metabolize
carbohydrates and control food intake. When you sleep less you eat more
and have more difficulty burning the calories you consume. Sleep
deprivation makes you hungrier by increasing the appetite-stimulating
hormone ghrelin and makes it harder for you to get full by reducing
levels of the satiety-inducing hormone leptin. People who sleep less
than 6 hours a night are 30% more likely to become obese than those who
sleep 7 to 9 hours a night.
Wow. Nice info
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