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

Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours

University of Leicester team combined measurements from activity monitors and questionnaires for the largest study of impact of aircraft noise on sleep

Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours
2024-09-25
(Press-News.org) Noise from aircraft at night is linked with disturbed sleep quality and sleep-wake cycle, a new study using movement trackers has shown.

Environmental health experts at the University of Leicester combined measurements from activity monitors and self-reported sleep information for the first time to put together a more detailed picture of how aircraft noise impacts sleep, in the largest such study to date.

The results, published in Environmental Health Perspectives, show that people exposed to higher levels of night-time aircraft noise experienced more restlessness during sleep and disruption in daily sleep rhythm, even if they had a full night’s sleep.

The team was led from the University of Leicester’s Centre for Environmental Health and Sustainability and involved University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust, University College London, Imperial College London and City St George's, University of London. They used the UK Biobank cohort study, a large UK study originally set up to examine links between genes and disease, to identify and analyse data from over 80,000 people living near four major airports (London Heathrow, London Gatwick, Manchester and Birmingham) in England. Recruitment into the study was independent of airports or interest in aircraft noise, so the study is unlikely to reflect those with pre-existing concerns about aircraft noise.

To measure sleep, the researchers used wearable devices (similar in size to a watch) that tracked movement during sleep, a method called actimetry. Actimetry data were collected for approximately 20% of the participants between 2013 and 2015. Alongside this, they used responses to questionnaires collected between 2006 and 2013, in which people reported on their sleep quality, how long they slept, and whether they took daytime naps.

Lead author Xiangpu Gong, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Leicester, said: “We used information from both wearable devices that track movement during sleep and self-reported questionnaires to get a more comprehensive picture of sleep. The wearable devices provided objective data about how restful sleep was and the patterns of sleep, while questionnaires helped us understand how people felt about their sleep.”

The aircraft noise each person was exposed to was estimated using noise maps created by the UK Civil Aviation Authority. The maps showed how loud the aircraft noise was (in decibels dB) in 2011 in areas around the airports and this was matched to where the participants lived. The sleep of those exposed to higher noise levels, defined as a night-time average of 55 dB or more, was compared with those exposed to less than 45 dB. The analyses took into account other factors that may affect sleep such as age, sex, ethnicity, income, physical activity, and environmental conditions.

Higher levels of night-time aircraft noise (55 dB or more) were associated with increased movement during sleep, which is a sign of sleep disruption. Participants exposed to high levels of noise also showed disrupted sleep-wake cycles, meaning their daily sleep rhythm was less regular. This is despite the fact that the total time they spent in bed was not much different.

Xiangpu added: “Our study suggests that night-time aircraft noise was associated with more restless sleep and disrupted sleep-wake cycles, suggestive of a link between night-time aircraft noise exposure and sleep disturbance. Poorer sleep patterns, as measured by actimetry, have been associated with higher risk of mental health problems, conditions like diabetes and obesity and with mortality risk.

“The key message for the public is that higher night-time aircraft noise was linked with disturbed sleep quality, even if people didn’t realise it. Sleep disturbance could have long-term effects on health, so it’s important for policies to address and reduce noise pollution from airplanes.”

Anna Hansell, Professor of Environmental Epidemiology at the University of Leicester, led the study. Professor Hansell, who is funded by the National Institute for Health and Social Care (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC), said: “This study is different because it is one of the largest on this topic and combined sleep data from wearable devices with self-reported sleep information. Most previous studies have relied on people’s self-reports about their sleep, which can sometimes be inaccurate due to poor recall. In contrast, actimetry, which uses devices to track sleep, doesn’t require people to remember how they slept, hence providing a more objective measure of sleep.

“Interestingly, while we found evidence that night-time aircraft noise was linked to poorer sleep (more movement and disrupted sleep-wake cycles) as measured by actimetric devices, the length of time people slept did not appear to be affected.

“It is of concern that current pressure on airports to increase night flights could result in more night-time aircraft noise from airplanes, with potential impacts on sleep disturbance and ultimately on health.”

Associations between aircraft noise, sleep and sleep-wake cycle: actimetric data from the UK Biobank cohort near four major airports is published in Environmental Health Perspectives, DOI: 10.1289/EHP14156 Link: https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP14156

###

Notes to Editors

For further information, a copy of the paper or interview requests, please contact the University of Leicester press office on 0116 252 2160 or press@le.ac.uk

About the University of Leicester

The University of Leicester is led by discovery and innovation – an international centre for excellence renowned for research, teaching and broadening access to higher education. It is among the Top 30 universities in the Times Higher Education (THE)’s Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021 rankings with 89% of research assessed as world-leading or internationally excellent, with wide-ranging impacts on society, health, culture, and the environment. In 2023, the University received an overall Gold in the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) 2023, making it one of a small number of institutions nationally to achieve TEF Gold alongside a top 30 REF performance. The University is home to more than 20,000 students and approximately 4,000 staff.

The NIHR Leicester BRC is part of the NIHR and hosted by the University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust in partnership with the University of Leicester, Loughborough University and University Hospitals of Northamptonshire NHS Group. The NIHR Cambridge BRC is also part of the NIHR and hosted by Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in partnership with the University of Cambridge.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours 2 Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fossils from the Adriatic Sea show a recent and worrying reversal of fortunes

Fossils from the Adriatic Sea show a recent and worrying reversal of fortunes
2024-09-25
If you’d stopped monitoring the Adriatic Sea’s marine life in the mid-20th century, the outlook would have been promising. Snails and the clams they hunt for food increased in abundance for several decades during the late 1800s and early 1900s, evidence of a vibrant and healthy ecosystem. Then, a threshold was crossed. Populations of both predator and prey abruptly plummeted and in some cases disappeared entirely. They were replaced by the common corbulid clam (Varicorbula gibba), which has the ability to slow down its metabolism in unfavorable conditions. Whenever paleontologists find an abundance of this species in the marine fossil record, it often means ...

With curtailed carbon emissions, corals can survive climate change

With curtailed carbon emissions, corals can survive climate change
2024-09-25
KANEOHE, HI (Sept 24, 2024 1:05 p.m. HST)- In a study published today in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, researchers at the UH Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology (HIMB) Toonen- Bowen “ToBo” Lab have identified scenarios under which eight of the most common species of coral found in Hawaiʻi can adapt to and survive ocean warming and acidification. The corals in the study are prevalent throughout the Indo-Pacific, a region that comprises more than two-thirds of the coral reefs on planet Earth, and were found to be capable of surviving a “low ...

Global prevalence of short-sightedness in children and teens set to top 740 million cases by 2050

2024-09-24
Around 1 in 3 children and teens around the world is short (near)-sighted, with the global prevalence of myopia set to top 740 million cases by 2050 in this age group, finds a pooled data analysis of the available evidence, published online in the British Journal of Ophthalmology. Female sex, East Asian or urban area residence, and educational level all seem to be key factors influencing prevalence, the findings indicate. Short (near)-sightedness (myopia), which describes difficulty seeing objects at a distance, typically starts in early childhood and tends to worsen with age, explain the researchers. It has emerged ...

Urgent rethink of bottled water’s huge and growing toll on human and planetary health

2024-09-24
The huge and growing toll bottled water is taking on human and planetary health warrants an urgent rethink of its use as 1 million bottles are bought every minute around the globe, with that figure set to rise further still amid escalating demand, warn population health experts in a commentary published in the open access journal BMJ Global Health. Some 2 billion people around the world with limited or no access to safe drinking water rely on bottled water. But for the rest of us, it’s largely a matter of convenience and the unshaken belief—aided and abetted by industry marketing—that bottled water is safer and often healthier than tap ...

Women still missing out on treatment for their No 1 killer—cardiovascular disease

2024-09-24
Women in the UK, and elsewhere, are still missing out on vital treatment for their No 1 killer—cardiovascular disease—despite significant progress in the medical management of heart disease and stroke, concludes a consensus statement published online in the journal Heart. They continue to be underdiagnosed, undertreated, and underrepresented in clinical trials in all areas of cardiovascular disease, says the statement. Among other things, it calls for dedicated women’s heart champions and heart hubs, plus a women’s ...

Palestinian education ‘under attack’, leaving a generation close to losing hope, study warns

Palestinian education ‘under attack’, leaving a generation close to losing hope, study warns
2024-09-24
The ongoing war in Gaza will set children and young people’s education back by up to five years and risks creating a lost generation of permanently traumatised Palestinian youth, a new study warns. The report, by a team of academics working in partnership with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), is the first to comprehensively quantify the war’s toll on learning since it began in October 2023. It also details the devastating impact on children, young people and teachers, supported by new accounts from frontline staff and ...

Semaglutide improves outcomes for obese patients with common skin condition, new study shows

2024-09-24
(Wednesday, 25 September 2024, Amsterdam, Netherlands) A pioneering study, presented today at the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress 2024, demonstrates the significant potential of semaglutide in treating hidradenitis suppurative (HS), a common and chronic skin condition, in people with obesity.1 This is the first study to explore the use of semaglutide for HS, marking a critical milestone in the search for effective treatments for this painful and debilitating condition. HS is currently estimated to affect approximately 1 in 100 people, with obesity being a significant risk factor. The condition is characterised ...

Could GLP1RA drugs lower high iron levels?

2024-09-24
GLP1RA agonists have been increasing in popularity for treating obesity and type 2 diabetes.  With this novel treatment proving to be very effective, researchers are curious to know more about what other potential treatments it could also hold. Researchers at the University of Michigan investigated another potential way GLP1RA drugs can be useful in treating type two diabetes associated with a genetic condition that causes high levels of iron, called hereditary hemochromatosis. High iron levels with hereditary hemochromatosis can cause predisposition to liver disease ...

C-Path’s PKD outcomes consortium receives BAA Award for project to advance drug development tools for autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease

2024-09-24
TUCSON, Ariz., Sept. 19, 2024 — Critical Path Institute (C-Path) is thrilled to announce its Polycystic Kidney Disease Outcomes Consortium (PKDOC) has been awarded an Autosomal Dominant Tubulointerstitial Kidney Disease (ADTKD) focused Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) contract from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The overarching objective of the work supported by the BAA award is to leverage collaboration with the Wake Forest Rare Inherited Kidney Disease team and its ADTKD registry, to analyze clinical and laboratory data that will help evaluate prognosis in ADTKD and help set the stage for future clinical trials.  ADTKD only affects ...

New insights into hot carrier solar cells: Increasing generation and extraction

New insights into hot carrier solar cells: Increasing generation and extraction
2024-09-24
Hot carrier solar cells, a concept introduced several decades ago, have long been seen as a potential breakthrough in solar energy technology. These cells could surpass the Shockley–Queisser efficiency limit, which is a theoretical maximum efficiency for single-junction solar cells. Despite their promise, practical implementation has faced significant challenges, particularly in managing the rapid extraction of hot electrons across material interfaces. Recent research has focused on using satellite valleys in the conduction band to temporarily store hot electrons before collection. However, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Campylobacter jejuni-specific antibody gives hope to vaccine development

A viral close-up of HTLV-1

Virtual reality can help pedestrians and cyclists swerve harmful pollutants – study

Neuroscience luminary Hermona Soreq sheds light on the roles of RNA regulators in neurodegenerative diseases

Ancient reef-builders dodged extinction — at least temporarily

Citizen scientists help discover microplastics along the entire German coastline

Rising waters, waning forests: How scientists are using tree rings to study how rising sea levels affect coastal forests

Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours

Fossils from the Adriatic Sea show a recent and worrying reversal of fortunes

With curtailed carbon emissions, corals can survive climate change

Global prevalence of short-sightedness in children and teens set to top 740 million cases by 2050

Urgent rethink of bottled water’s huge and growing toll on human and planetary health

Women still missing out on treatment for their No 1 killer—cardiovascular disease

Palestinian education ‘under attack’, leaving a generation close to losing hope, study warns

Semaglutide improves outcomes for obese patients with common skin condition, new study shows

Could GLP1RA drugs lower high iron levels?

C-Path’s PKD outcomes consortium receives BAA Award for project to advance drug development tools for autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease

New insights into hot carrier solar cells: Increasing generation and extraction

Clinical trial results show low-intensity therapy can achieve positive outcomes for certain pediatric leukemia subtypes

How emotion boosts memory for context

Specially designed video games may benefit mental health of children and teenagers

President Obama 2012 reelection linked to significantly better mental health in Black men — but only those with a college education

Finding the sweet spot: Machine learning reveals factors for successful crowdfunding

University of Houston unveils guideline to enhance treatment access for opioid use disorder in community pharmacies

Atmospheric methane increase during pandemic due primarily to wetland flooding

Violence, harassment from students is overwhelmingly ‘part of the job’ for Saskatchewan education sector workers

Thermal effects in spintronics systematically assessed for first time

Study shows rates of e-bike injuries rise fourfold and powered scooter injuries nearly double

Prediabetes during adolescence and young adulthood linked with likelihood of adverse pregnancy outcomes

Researchers discover new role of immune cells in eye health

[Press-News.org] Night-time noise linked to restless nights for airport neighbours
University of Leicester team combined measurements from activity monitors and questionnaires for the largest study of impact of aircraft noise on sleep