PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Alcohol interferes with body's ability to regulate sleep

Alcohol interferes with body's ability to regulate sleep
2014-12-10
(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine have found that drinking alcohol to fall asleep interferes with sleep homeostasis, the body's sleep-regulating mechanism.

Alcohol is known to be a powerful somnogen, or sleep inducer, and approximately 20 percent of the U.S. adult population drinks alcohol to help fall asleep. The researchers, led by Mahesh Thakkar, Ph.D., associate professor and director of research in the MU School of Medicine's Department of Neurology, have studied alcohol's effects on sleep for more than five years. They found that alcohol interferes with the brain's built-in system for regulating a person's need for sleep.

"The prevailing thought was that alcohol promotes sleep by changing a person's circadian rhythm -- the body's built-in 24-hour clock," Thakkar said. "However, we discovered that alcohol actually promotes sleep by affecting a person's sleep homeostasis -- the brain's built-in mechanism that regulates your sleepiness and wakefulness."

Sleep homeostasis balances the body's need for sleep in relation to how long a person has been awake. If an individual loses sleep, the body produces adenosine, a naturally occurring sleep-regulating substance that increases a person's need for sleep. When a person goes to sleep early, sleep homeostasis is shifted and he or she may wake up in the middle of the night or early morning. The researchers found that alcohol alters the sleep homeostatic mechanism and puts pressure on an individual to sleep. When this happens, the sleep period is shifted, and a person may experience disrupted sleep.

"Based on our results, it's clear that alcohol should not be used as a sleep aid," said Pradeep Sahota, M.D., chair of the MU School of Medicine's Department of Neurology and an author of the study. "Alcohol disrupts sleep and the quality of sleep is diminished. Additionally, alcohol is a diuretic, which increases your need to go the bathroom and causes you to wake up earlier in the morning."

In addition to studying alcohol's impact on sleep homeostasis, the researchers explored how alcohol withdrawal affects sleep. The investigators found that after extended periods of frequent drinking, subjects would fall asleep as expected, but would wake within a few hours and would be unable to fall back asleep. When the subjects were not given alcohol, the researchers found that subjects showed symptomatic insomnia.

"During acute alcohol withdrawal, subjects displayed a significant increase in wakefulness with a reduction in rapid eye movement and non-rapid eye movement sleep," Thakkar said. "This caused insomnia-like symptoms and suggests an impaired sleep homeostasis."

The researchers hope to use these findings to explore other effects of alcohol consumption.

"Sleep is an immense area of study," Thakkar said. "Approximately one-third of our life is spent sleeping. Coupled with statistics that show 20 percent of people drink alcohol to sleep, it's vital that we understand how the two interact. If you are experiencing difficulty sleeping, don't use alcohol. Talk to your doctor or a sleep medicine physician to determine what factors are keeping you from sleeping. These factors can then be addressed with individualized treatments."

INFORMATION:

The study, "Alcohol Disrupts Sleep Homeostasis," is an invited article published in the international biomedical journal Alcohol. In addition to Thakkar and Sahota, the MU research team includes Rishi Sharma, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in the MU School of Medicine's Department of Neurology.

The research is supported by grants from the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (AA020334 and AA0174720) and by resources from the Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans' Hospital.

About the University of Missouri School of Medicine The MU School of Medicine has improved health, education and research in Missouri and beyond for more than 165 years. MU physicians treat patients from every county in the state, and more Missouri physicians received their medical degrees from MU than from any other university. For more information, visit http://medicine.missouri.edu/.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Alcohol interferes with body's ability to regulate sleep Alcohol interferes with body's ability to regulate sleep 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Dinosaur 13 doesn't unearth whole truth about paleontology and fossil protection on US public lands

2014-12-10
In light of the film Dinosaur 13, which describes the discovery and loss of the complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton known as "Sue" by the Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology reiterates its strong endorsement of the U.S. Federal laws and regulations that protect fossils on public lands, which are fully consistent with the professional standards held by paleontological scientists and with the ethics of the Society. Most vertebrate fossils are rare, many of them unique. The laws and regulations for collecting fossils on Federal ...

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonists may treat alcohol dependence

2014-12-10
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are nuclear receptor proteins that regulate the expression of genes. PPAR agonists, which activate PPARs, are used to treat diabetes and elevated blood lipids. Mouse and human data suggest that PPAR agonists may be repurposed for treating alcohol dependence in humans. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are nuclear receptor proteins that regulate the expression of genes. Drugs that activate PPARs - PPAR agonists - are used to treat diabetes and elevated blood lipids. Given previous rodent research, ...

Worms' mental GPS helps them find food

Worms mental GPS helps them find food
2014-12-10
LA JOLLA--You've misplaced your cell phone. You start by scanning where you remember leaving it: on your bureau. You check and double-check the bureau before expanding your search around and below the bureau. Eventually, you switch from this local area to a more global one, widening your search to the rest of your room and beyond. When it comes to animals and food, a similar strategy is used to search for food ("foraging"). Now, Salk scientists have developed a mathematical theory--based on roundworm foraging--that predicts how animals decide to switch from localized ...

Novel approach for estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer reported

2014-12-10
Loyola researchers and collaborators have reported promising results from a novel therapeutic approach for women with estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer. The new approach, a new drug class called gamma secretase inhibitors (GSI), specifically inhibits Notch and shuts down critical genes and cancer cells responsible for tumor growth. Kathy Albain, MD, FACP, who led the study, will present findings Dec. 11 during the 2014 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Existing cancer drugs are effective in killing mature breast cancer cells. But a handful of immature breast ...

Prenatal exposure to common household chemicals linked with substantial drop in child IQ

2014-12-10
Children exposed during pregnancy to elevated levels of two common chemicals found in the home--di-n-butyl phthalate (DnBP) and di-isobutyl phthalate (DiBP)--had an IQ score, on average, more than six points lower than children exposed at lower levels, according to researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. The study is the first to report a link between prenatal exposure to phthalates and IQ in school-age children. Results appear online in the journal PLOS ONE. DnBP and DiBP are found in a wide variety of consumer products, from dryer sheets ...

Oldest horned dinosaur species in North America found in Montana

Oldest horned dinosaur species in North America found in Montana
2014-12-10
Scientists have named the first definite horned dinosaur species from the Early Cretaceous in North America, according to a study published December 10, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Andrew Farke from Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology and colleagues. The limited fossil record for neoceratopsian--or horned dinosaurs--from the Early Cretaceous in North America restricts scientists' ability to reconstruct the early evolution of this group. The authors of this study have discovered a dinosaur skull in Montana that represents the first horned dinosaur from ...

Scientists estimate the total weight of plastic floating in the world's oceans

2014-12-10
Nearly 269,000 tons of plastic pollution may be floating in the world's oceans, according to a study published December 10, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Marcus Eriksen from Five Gyres Institute and colleagues. Microplastic pollution is found in varying concentrations throughout the oceans, but estimates of the global abundance and weight of floating plastics, both micro and macroplastic, lack sufficient data to support them. To better estimate the total number of plastic particles and their weight floating in the world's oceans, scientists from six countries ...

Sharing that crowded holiday flight with countless hitchhiking dust mites

2014-12-10
ANN ARBOR--As if holiday travel isn't stressful enough. Now University of Michigan researchers say we're likely sharing that already overcrowded airline cabin with countless tiny creatures including house dust mites. "What people might not realize when they board a plane is that they can share the flight with a myriad of microscopic passengers-- including house dust mites--that take advantage of humanity's technological progress for their own benefit," said U-M biologist Pavel Klimov. "House dust mites can easily travel on an airline passenger's clothes, skin, food ...

Targeting mitochondrial enzyme may reduce chemotherapy drug's cardiac side effects

2014-12-10
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have identified two compounds that appear, in cellular and animal models, to block the cardiac damage caused by the important chemotherapy drug doxorubicin. Their report in the Dec. 10 issue of Science Translational Medicine indicates that inhibiting the action of an enzyme that is key to the generation of cellular energy in mitochondria could prevent doxorubicin-induced damage to cardiac cells without reducing the drug's anti-tumor effects. "Doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy limits the amount of the drug a patient ...

Patient's own stem cells could clear a cloudy cornea, Pitt team says

2014-12-10
Treating the potentially blinding haze of a scar on the cornea might be as straightforward as growing stem cells from a tiny biopsy of the patient's undamaged eye and then placing them on the injury site, according to mouse model experiments conducted by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. The findings, published today in Science Translational Medicine, could one day rescue vision for millions of people worldwide and decrease the need for corneal transplants. According to the National Eye Institute, part of the National Institutes of Heath, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Kids’ behavioral health is a growing share of family health costs

Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm

COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces risk to pregnant women and baby

The role of vaccination in maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 in pregnancy

Mayo Clinic smartwatch system helps parents shorten and defuse children's severe tantrums early

Behavioral health spending spikes to 40% of all children’s health expenditures, nearly doubling in a decade

Digital cognitive behavioral treatment for generalized anxiety disorder

Expenditures for pediatric behavioral health care over time and estimated family financial burden

Air conditioning in nursing homes and mortality during extreme heat

The Alps to lose a record number of glaciers in the next decade

What makes a good proton conductor?

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Bulgaria

New international study reveals major survival gaps among children with cancer

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Turkey

Scientists develop a smarter mRNA therapy that knows which cells to target

Neuroanatomy-informed brain–machine hybrid intelligence for robust acoustic target detection

Eight SwRI hydrogen projects funded by ENERGYWERX

The Lundquist Institute and its start-up company Vitalex Biosciences Announces Strategic Advancement of Second-Generation fungal Vaccine VXV-01 through Phase 1 Trials under $40 Million Competitive Con

Fine particles in pollution are associated with early signs of autoimmune disease

Review article | Towards a Global Ground-Based Earth Observatory (GGBEO): Leveraging existing systems and networks

Penn and UMich create world’s smallest programmable, autonomous robots

Cleveland researchers launch first major study to address ‘hidden performance killer’ in athletes

To connect across politics, try saying what you oppose

Modulating key interaction prevents virus from entering cells

Project explores barriers to NHS career progression facing international medical graduates

Jeonbuk National University researchers explore the impact of different seasonings on the flavor perception of Doenjang soup

Two Keck Medicine of USC Hospitals named Leapfrog Top Teaching Hospitals

World-first discovery uncovers how glioblastoma tumours dodge chemotherapy, potentially opening the door to new treatments

A fatal mix-up: How certain gut bacteria drive multiple sclerosis

New AI tool identifies not just genetic mutations, but the diseases they may cause

[Press-News.org] Alcohol interferes with body's ability to regulate sleep