
Dr. Matt Walker: The Biology of Sleep & Your Unique Sleep Needs | Huberman Lab Guest Series
Andrew Huberman
3 abr 2024
Mindsip insights from this episode:
Prioritize sleep to maintain natural killer cell activity
A single night of only four hours of sleep can cause a 70% reduction in the activity of critical anti-cancer immune cells called natural killer cells.
Prioritize sleep to protect gene activity and reduce health risks
Just one week of sleeping six hours a night can distort the activity of 711 genes, increasing the expression of genes linked to tumors and chronic inflammation.
Manage sleep to curb junk food cravings
When you are sleep-deprived, your brain releases more endocannabinoids, the same chemicals stimulated by cannabis, which drives cravings for unhealthy foods.
Evaluate sleep using QQRT framework for optimal rest
Good sleep should be evaluated using the QQRT framework, which stands for Quantity, Quality, Regularity, and Timing.
Prioritize sleep regularity over quantity to lower mortality risk
Recent research suggests that sleep regularity (going to bed and waking up at the same time) is almost twice as important as sleep quantity for reducing mortality risk.
Prioritize early sleep to maximize growth hormone release
The largest surge of growth hormone occurs in the early part of the night's sleep, so going to bed late can significantly reduce its release even if you sleep for the same total duration.
Stop following rigid 90-minute sleep cycles for better rest
Don't terminate your sleep based on a rigid 90-minute cycle, as individual sleep cycles can vary from 75 to 120 minutes.
Get up after 25 minutes of wakefulness in bed
If you're awake in bed for more than 25 minutes, get up and do something relaxing in another room to avoid associating your bed with wakefulness.
Prioritize deep sleep to cleanse brain of toxins
During deep sleep, a cleansing system in the brain washes away toxic proteins like beta-amyloid and tau, which are linked to Alzheimer's disease.
Cool your brain by yawning
The most likely reason we yawn is to cool the brain when its temperature rises, not to balance blood oxygen and carbon dioxide levels.
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