Portsmouth News

Improving deep sleep YOUR HEALTH

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Like many people I started to struggle with my sleep during the pandemic – finding myself staying up way past my usual bedtime or unable to drift off as quickly as usual.

Wondering whether tracking how much slumber I got each night could improve matters, I decided to try a fitness watch and found that, sure enough, being able to see how many Zs I’d caught (or not) the night before really was a good incentive to hit the hay earlier.

What I didn’t anticipate, however, was what the tracker would reveal about the quality of the sleep I was getting.

Looking at the app on my phone each morning, I discovered that most nights I was getting well below the roughly 90 minutes of deep sleep I needed.

Plus, it didn’t seem to matter if I went to bed earlier. On nights when I slept for longer, the chart didn’t register an increase in deep sleep and I noticed that I felt particular groggy the next morning.

But does the breakdown really matter? And is it possible to increase the amount of deep sleep you get?

Here, experts explains everything you need to know…

WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENT STAGES OF SLEEP?

“There are various ways to describe the stages of sleep but essentiall­y we have four which go from light to deep, physically restorativ­e sleep, and then REM sleep,” says sleep psychologi­st

Stephanie Romiszewsk­i, on behalf of LloydsPhar­macy. “REM sleep is a very active sleep where we have most of our dreams.”

We go through these cycles at various times during the night, each usually lasting around 90 minutes, but the percentage of each stage changes depending on whether you’re at the beginning or the end of your sleep, Romiszewsk­i says:

“This means that no area of your sleep is more important than the other.”

HOW MUCH DEEP SLEEP ARE PEOPLE MEANT TO GET EACH NIGHT ON AVERAGE?

“Technicall­y, sleep specialist­s agree that for adults, the range of 6.68 to 10 hours of sleep per night is the optimum amount,” says Dr Lourdes DelRosso from the World Sleep Society. “Deep sleep is on average 20% of the total sleep at night.”

WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU DON’T GET ENOUGH DEEP SLEEP?

“Deep sleep is where we experience cell restoratio­n, growth hormones, cytokine production (for your immune response), muscle repair and hormone regulation,” says Romiszewsk­i. “You’re more likely to get sick, feel depressed and gain weight when deep sleep is impaired.”

Plus, if you aren’t getting enough deep sleep, this in turn means that you’re not getting enough sleep within the different stages. Dr DelRosso says: “There are a myriad of symptoms and potential health impacts if healthy sleep is not achieved. Stretching one poor night into chronic sleep loss can lead to irritabili­ty, mood swings, and several mental disorders such as depression. Because sleep deprivatio­n shortens telomere length in DNA which facilitate­s chaotic cellular growth, it can increase the risk of various forms of cancer.”

WHAT CAN PEOPLE DO TO TRY AND INCREASE THE AMOUNT OF DEEP SLEEP THEY GET?

“I wouldn’t focus too much on the amount of deep sleep you’re currently having per night as this can’t be controlled,” Romiszewsk­i says. “I would look to try to improve the overall quality of your sleep.” Dr DelRosso says in order to do that, you need to “establish regular sleep and wake times and do not exceed 30 minutes of daytime sleep or napping”.

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