We sleep like
rocks, Roman ruins.
That was what
I said in a Facebook post to friends in the first week of living in our Roman
apartment. Anyone who has gone through a period of sleep deprivation or worse,
insomnia, can attest to the restorative power of getting a good night’s sleep.
Sleeping Hermaphroditos, a Roman marble restored by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in 1620 by adding a marble mattress. Paris, Louvre Museum. |
I got
interested in sleep science a long time ago when I was part of a sleep
deprivation study at the University of Washington, where I had been temping in
a women’s health office. Someone had dropped out of a three-day study looking
at thermoregulation and it paid pretty well, plus did not involve any drugs, so
I agreed to participate. The researchers were trying to figure out how new
mothers, suffering from sleep deprivation, also had thermoregulation problems
that could be quite acute. They had rigged a way to measure thermoregulation
using a sort of shower system that took subjects from sweating to shivering by
altering water temperature, and needed three days to test because subjects had
to forego a whole night’s sleep between tests two and three. I didn’t need to
see the published results to know that I had a much shorter time between
sweating and shivering on day three after no sleep. The whole thing fascinated
me.
One benefit of
moving to a new place with no furniture is getting to start over. I knew that
mattress technology had improved a lot since the last time I bought a bed, so I
did a bit of research and decided to splurge on new mattresses from Eve, a
UK-based company that shipped their high-tech foam mattresses in a box and gave
you a 100 days to try them out. I was sold after the first night. In fact, I continue
to be amazed at how well I sleep on this mattress, but I don’t want to turn
this into an infomercial. Suffice it to say, proper support for the body and head
(pillows matter too) make a difference in how we sleep and how well-rested we
feel. My mother has radicular pain in her neck that had recently required physical
therapy and medication, and she has been able to stop the pain meds altogether.
My cat Mimi sleeps with me and during the day likes to nap under the covers, right in the middle of the bed. |
It has been
claimed that there is nothing that will prevent, delay, or reverse Alzheimer’s disease. Most of the mainstream medical establishment is focused on diagnosis and treatment of
disease, and limits attention to matters of general wellness to stating the
obvious. For example, the California clinical care guidelines for Alzheimer’s
Disease give hardly any space to issues of healthy living, and only suggest that lifestyle modifications may lower risks and help
the brain.
In her latest book and personal crusade to enlighten the public on the worsening sleep
deprivation crisis, Arianna Huffington documents new findings from research
that show the benefits of sufficient sleep to brain functionality, what she
describes as “memory consolidation, brain and neurochemical cleansing, and
cognitive maintenance.” Certainly for those with compromised brain health,
these benefits are even more vital. Dr. Gregg D. Jacobs, a renowned advocate
for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to cure insomnia, warns that commonly
prescribed medications such as Lunesta and Ambien have risks including elevated
mortality for long-term use and are only mildly effective. I shudder to think
what Alzheimer’s patients, already dealing with sleep disruption side-effects
from Aricept and Namenda, do to themselves if they add insomnia medication. I
only recently read that the vivid nightmares can be mitigated by taking
Alzheimer meds earlier in the day instead of before bedtime. It’s no wonder
that people turn to online forums for suggestions and advice in the absence of
clear medical guidance.
One doctor’s
blog called Eating Academy that I have been following since my own health
issues in the past few years, provides an important source of health
information that will soon be revamped into a book and website,
peterattiamd.com. Sleep and recovery, what Dr. Attia calls “sleep hygiene”
require a deliberate effort, especially as technology alters our habits and
routines in ways that may have important consequences for health and wellness.
In this post he shares how movement, and preparing the body for a workout, are
crucial aspects of maintaining the body and being free of pain. I find his
arguments and explanations to be very helpful and enlightening.
There’s no clear number of hours of sleep we need for optimal health, although some argue evidence points to seven as the magic number. All I know is, we are now sleeping better than before, and we wake up pain free. We are lucky to have plenty of Roman sunshine to start the morning off on the right track, although a grey cloudy morning has its own kind of beauty too.