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How Sleep Deprivation is Affecting Your BRAIN

How Sleep Deprivation is Affecting Your BRAIN

By Iyokho OsaretinPublished 2 years ago 3 min read
How Sleep Deprivation is Affecting Your BRAIN
Photo by Gregory Pappas on Unsplash

You know that awful feeling you get when you're sleep-deprived: your brain feels fuzzy, your body aches with fatigue, and you could literally fall asleep anywhere? In our modern, fast-paced society, it's become a common struggle to get a full night's rest. While you may think that a simple cup of coffee or an occasional energy drink will cure your tiredness, researchers are now finding that sleep deprivation can have far more serious consequences on your body than you might think.

So, why do we sleep? Virtually every creature on Earth sleeps; it's a vital process for our continued survival. While it may appear that sleep is simply a time for our bodies to shut down, the reality couldn't be more different. There are two main ways in which we benefit from sleep: our physical health and our mental health. While we sleep, our bodies take the time to repair and rejuvenate themselves. Human growth hormone is released, which allows muscles to grow, damage to tissues to be repaired, other hormones to be produced, and cells to prepare themselves for the following day's activities. The brain uses this time to sift through all the information it has collected throughout the day, process it, and decide what's important and needs to be retained and what is irrelevant. Further to this, the brain performs physical repairs on itself as well. The neurons in the brain are refreshed and restored by two different types of glial cells, often thought of as the support structure of the nervous system. Microglia cells are responsible for removing neurons that have become old or worn out through a process known as phagocytosis, which means "devour" in Greek. The other type of glial cells, the astrocytes, alter the synapses that connect neurons to ensure that their structure is as efficient as possible.

So, what if we don't get enough sleep? A study conducted in Italy looked at mammalian brains during sleep and while they were sleep-deprived and found stark similarities between what was going on. They noticed that in sleep-deprived brains, the glial cells were still functioning but in an elevated and seemingly uncontrolled way. Their experiments involved four test groups of mice. The first group acted as the control and was allowed to sleep normally. The second group was woken up from their sleep at regular intervals. The third group represented sleep deprivation and was kept awake for an extra eight hours, and the fourth group represented chronic sleep deprivation and was kept awake for five days in a row. The researchers then looked at the activity of the astrocyte cells. They saw activity in 5.7% of the synapses of the well-rested brains and in 7.3% of the synapses in the spontaneously awake brains. But it was the sleep-deprived brains that surprised researchers the most. In these cells, the astrocytes had taken on a new role and started to behave like microglial cells, actually devouring the synapses instead of rewiring them. In the sleep-deprived brains, this was seen in 8.4% of the synapses, and in the chronically sleep-deprived brains, it was seen in 13.5% of them. The researchers also noted that the synapses that tended to be involved were the largest and the oldest ones, which isn't necessarily a bad thing in the short term. This process could help clean out harmful debris and remove worn-out connections, allowing new ones to thrive. But in the long term, this is a problem because uncontrolled microglial activity has been linked to Alzheimer's and other degenerative brain conditions. This could explain why a lack of sleep seems to make people more vulnerable to these illnesses.

Beyond this, there are a number of other health issues that can arise if you don't get enough sleep. You may start to experience memory problems, sore muscles, headaches, and irritability. You have an increased risk of diabetes and depression, your blood pressure can rise, you get sick more often, and you can even experience hallucinations.

In conclusion, even though it's something that we all do and, quite frankly, can't live without, there's still a lot about sleep that we don't fully understand. Will getting more sleep over time help to reverse the effects or protect the brain from a few sleepless nights? Studies are continually showing that sleep disorders are linked to many other conditions, and this reinforces how important it is for us to sleep well. In this day and age, it is perhaps more important than ever to do so, but we really do need to try; otherwise, there could be serious consequences for our health later down the road.

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