| Literature DB >> 30083291 |
Vijay Kumar Chattu1, Sateesh M Sakhamuri1, Raman Kumar2, David Warren Spence3, Ahmed S BaHammam4, Seithikurippu R Pandi-Perumal5.
Abstract
Over the last three to four decades, it has been observed that the average total number of hours of sleep obtained per night by normal individuals have decreased. Concomitantly, global figures indicate that insufficient sleep is associated with serious adverse health and social outcomes. Moreover, insufficient sleep has been linked to seven of the fifteen leading causes of death. Additionally, current evidence suggests that sleep plays a significant role in determining cognitive performance and workplace productivity. There is a great need for a systematic analysis of the economic impact of insufficient sleep, particularly given current evidence that this phenomenon, as well as the poor sleep hygiene practices which produce it, is increasing worldwide. This paper takes the view that health authorities around the world need to raise the general awareness of benefits of sleep. There is considerable scope for research into both the public health impact as well as the macroeconomic consequences of insufficient sleep syndrome (ISS). Additionally, various models which estimate the undiagnosed burden of ISS on the GDP (gross domestic product) are needed to prioritize health issues and to highlight the national policies that are necessary to combat this medical problem. Sleep insufficiency has been declared to be a 'public health epidemic'; therefore, we propose ISS as a potential noncommunicable disease. This review elaborates on this topic further, exploring the causes and consequences of insufficient sleep, and thus providing a perspective on the policies that are needed as well as the research that will be required to support and justify these policies.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemics; Morbidity; Mortality; Public Health; Sleep Deprivation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30083291 PMCID: PMC6056073 DOI: 10.5935/1984-0063.20180013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Sci ISSN: 1984-0063
Proportions of the population sleeping less than seven hours.
| US | UK | Germany | Japan | Canada | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Less than 6 hours | 18% | 16% | 9% | 16% | 6% |
| 6 to 7 hours | 27% | 19% | 21% | 40% | 20% |
A summary of the main consequences of insufficient sleep.
| Complications | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|
| Daytime sleepiness | - Inadvertently fall asleep during sedentary activities,such as meetings, reading, watching television or movies, or while driving and increased risk for motor vehicle accidents | Komada et al.[ |
| Emotional disturbances | - Results in a
more negative mood, with reduced optimism and sociability.
Complaints of pain were also observed | Haack and |
| Effects on functions of the brain | - Cognitive
impairment, prefrontal cortex dysfunction, Novelty detection, a
mechanism that involves the frontal lobes, gets negatively
affected | Gosselin et al.[ |
| Effects on the structure of the brain | - Reduction of
cells in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus | Guzman-Marin et al.[ |
| Effects on body weight | - Weight gain
during insufficient sleep reverses when normal sleep is
resumed | Knutson and Van Cauter[ |
| Glucose metabolism | - Glucose
tolerance test shows a pre-diabetic state in otherwise normal
persons | Robertson et al.[ |
| Cardiovascular system | - Hypertension,
arrhythmia, oxidative stress,endothelial dysfunction,
inflammation, and metabolic disorder in coronary heart disease
patients | Aldabal & Bahammam[ |
| Reproductive system | - Impairment of sperm health | Liu et al.[ |
| Genes linked with immune and inflammatory processes | - Fraternal twins
have shown that resiliency and vulnerability to sleep loss are
highly heritable | Kuna et al.[ |
| Circardian rhythms | Reduction in circardian transcripts in whole blood | Archer & Oster[ |
| Immune System, Inflammation and Infection | - Decrease
antibody production following influenza vaccination | Bollinger et al.[ |
Figure 1An accumulating amount of evidence has identified insufficient sleep as the first cause for a number of direct health consequences: These include impairments in physiological functioning, mental/cognitive deficits, and mood or emotional effects. Other downstream sequelae include problems in the workplace and personal lives of affected individuals.
Figure 2Economic costs of insufficient sleep across five OECD countries.