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Prominent health researchers from a leading global institution have highlighted how understanding a crucial element of sleep can transform how you feel upon waking. In a report published last year, experts from Harvard Medical School in the United States stressed that sleep is vital for the body’s recovery, repair, and optimal performance.
Additionally, they pointed out that understanding sleep cycles can “enhance your sleep hygiene and leave you genuinely refreshed.” Many people mistakenly perceive sleep as simply the absence of being awake.
However, the researchers clarified that sleep is much more intricate, explaining that “scientists categorize sleep into two primary types: REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, associated with dreaming, and non-REM or quiet sleep. Surprisingly, these two are as distinct from each other as they are from wakefulness, yet both are crucial for energy replenishment.”
They elaborated: “Non-REM sleep includes three stages: light sleep, deeper sleep, and deep sleep. Sleep experts believe the final stage, known as deep sleep or slow-wave sleep, is when the body primarily renews and repairs itself. This stage is crucial for energy, improving your body’s ability to produce ATP, the energy molecule.”
“During deep sleep, blood flow is reduced to the brain, causing it to cool significantly. At the onset of this stage, the pituitary gland releases growth hormone pulses that stimulate tissue growth and muscle repair. Researchers have also found elevated levels of substances that boost the immune system, suggesting that deep sleep might prepare the body to fend off infections.”
The experts observed that individuals with interrupted deep sleep often wake up feeling less refreshed than those who achieve adequate deep sleep. When someone who is sleep-deprived finally rests, they tend to quickly progress through lighter sleep phases into deeper stages, spending more time there, underscoring the importance of deep sleep for optimal health.
The specialists added: “REM sleep helps restore your mind, perhaps in part by helping clear out irrelevant information. Studies of students’ ability to solve a complex puzzle involving abstract shapes suggest that the brain processes information overnight. Students who got a good night’s sleep after seeing the puzzle fared much better at solving it compared to those asked to solve the puzzle immediately.
“Other studies, from Harvard Medical School and elsewhere, have found that REM sleep facilitates learning and memory. People who were tested on how well they had learned a new task improved their scores after a night’s sleep. If they were prevented from having REM sleep, the improvements were lost.”
Further details are available through Harvard Medical School’s Special Health Report, Boosting Your Energy.