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By Claudia Hammond
The older we get the fewer hours
we need to sleep, seems to be the accepted wisdom. But there might be other
reasons for waking up earlier in the morning.
It’s common for older people to
say they have trouble sleeping. As many as half report some kind of sleep
disturbance, with between a quarter to a third experiencing
insomnia.
There seem to be two main
difficulties: falling asleep at the start of the night and then waking up too
early in the morning – yet finding it impossible to get back to sleep. In some
cases, the discomfort caused by a medical condition exacerbates sleep
difficulties, but many find that even without the disturbance of physical
symptoms, sleep still eludes them for at least part of the night.
A lack of sleep can have a
long-term impact on the immune system and on many other aspects of health,
includingwellbeing, as well as leading to daytime
sleepiness and an increased risk of accidents. But maybe people simply don’t
need as much sleep when they’re older and needn’t worry about it.
It is harder than it sounds to
establish how much sleep people of different ages need. You can, of course,
measure how many hours of sleep people actually get and if you do this you find
that on average older people sleep for a shorter time than their younger
friends, but that only tells you that they get less sleep, not that they need
less sleep.
Sometimes people will say that the
reason older people can’t sleep at night is they’ve spent part of the day
napping. But, others argue that feeling excessively sleepy during the daytime
should not be accepted as an inevitable aspect of ageing.
Insomnia in the retired is
not always taken seriously by doctors. In one study, 69% of older
people reported a sleep problem, but in 81% of cases the problem was not noted
on the patient’s chart.
So if we imagine for a moment that
older people do need the same amount of sleep, why then do they sleep for fewer
hours? One hypothesis is that the aging process disrupts their circadian
rhythms, causing them to wake earlier than they should. Studies have
demonstrated the clock does seem to shift, leading people to wake earlier in
the morning and go to bedearlier at night. They might still need the
sleep, but they can’t get it and when they do fall into a slumber, the quality
of sleep is not as good as when they were younger.
In a new study from
Russia, 130 people went to a laboratory one morning and then stayed
there all day and overnight. Staff kept them awake for the entire time,
regularly asking them to assess how sleepy they felt. These feelings of
sleepiness vary throughout the day and night and in sleep deprivation
experiments such as this, they are taken to reflect processes related to the
body clock such as changes in body temperature at different times of day and
the release of the hormone melatonin in the evening.
The slow-wave activity in the
volunteers’ brains was also measured several times during the day and night.
Then all this data was analysed in relation to a sleep diary the people had
kept for the previous week, in order to see how the pattern of sleepiness and
slow brainwaves varied according to propensity to be morning or evening types.
They found that, once again, the older people felt sleepy at different times
from the younger people and had different timings of slow-wave activity in the
brain.
The study’s author, Arcady
Putilov, suggests that two mechanisms might be responsible for the decrease in
sleep time. He believes that in middle age the processes underlying the
oscillations of slow-wave sleep weaken, making it harder to stay asleep, and on
top of that, in older age the stronger circadian rhythms weaken because changes
in body temperature and the release of the hormone melatonin weaken.
Support for a role for the impact
of circadian rhythms on the disruption of sleep in older people, comes from
brand new data obtained using a smartphone app called Entrain, developed by the
researchers at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, to help people adjust
their light levels at different times of day in the hope of combatting jet lag.
Users of the app are asked about
their typical sleep patterns and canchoose whether to share that data the researchers.
Five thousand people from around the world did, which has provided a snapshot
of global sleeping habits of people of different ages. Among the young people
there was a range of early risers and night owls, but the older group was more
homogenous.
Most woke early and went to bed
relatively early. In this study it was the men in their 40s who seemed to get
the least sleep, which is unusual. But the finding that older people sleep at
more specific times suggests that there is a narrower range of times in which
people past retirement age are able to get to sleep and stay asleep.
So changes in the body clock stop
older people getting to sleep and keep older people awake, maybe, then, it is a
myth that they need less sleep. It’s simply that they have a narrower window in
which to sleep. Perhaps the daytime napping isn’t preventing sleep at night.
Instead the lack of sleep in the night is causing sleepiness in the daytime,
hence the need for a nap to make up for the lost sleep.
But the debate doesn’t end there.
In a 2008 study, a study conducted at Brigham Women’s
Hospital in the
This time people were asked to try
to nap at various times of day. Once again the older adults found it harder,
implying that either their body clocks were keeping them awake or they hadn’t
built up as much of a sleep debt as the young people. So this time the
technicians made sure they were lacking in sleep. They monitored their brain
activity all night and every time they detected slow-wave activity, they
blasted the room with a noise, to disturb them. The followed day, tired out,
the older people found it just as easy to snooze as the young people. So this
suggests that when they really need the sleep they can get it and that, just
maybe, the rest of the time they’re not sleep-deprived.
After examining the findings of
320 studies an expert panel convened by the National Sleep Foundation in
the US recommends seven-to-nine-hours sleep a night for adults up to the age of
64 and seven-to-eight hours for the over 65s.
Yet the idea of changes in the
processes underlying circadian rhythms as we age, also seems compelling. So
this is one where it’s not yet possible to say whether it’s a myth that older
people need less sleep. What we do know is that trying to sleep on long, lonely
dark mornings, and finding yourself awake, but unrefreshed, is miserable and
should be taken seriously.
A Cochrane review of cognitive
behavioural interventions for sleep problems in adults over the age of 60
looked at the very best trials and found that in some cases it can be effective
and is worth consideration by doctors as an alternative to
sleeping pills.