The Free Press Journal

Here’s why you should never miss your afternoon naps

According to a study, sleeping regularly at that time of the day may help boost your working memory and it also improves mental agility

- AGENCIES

The researcher­s, including Wei Li from the Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China, suggests that afternoon nap seems to be associated with better locational awareness, verbal fluency and working memory.

Taking a regular afternoon nap can keep your brain sharp as a new study suggests that afternoon napping is linked to better mental agility. The researcher­s, including Wei Li from the Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China, suggests that afternoon nap seems to be associated with better locational awareness, verbal fluency and working memory.

For the study, published in the journal General Psychiatry, the researcher­s involved 2,214 ostensibly healthy people aged at least 60 and residents of several large cities around China.

In all, 1,534 took a regular afternoon nap, while 680 did not. All participan­ts underwent a series of health checks and cognitive assessment­s, including the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE) to check for dementia.

The average length of night time sleep was around 6.5 hours in both groups. Afternoon naps were defined as periods of at least five consecutiv­e minutes of sleep, but no more than 2 hours, and taken after lunch.

Participan­ts were asked how often they napped during the week – this ranged from once a week to every day.

The dementia screening tests included 30 items that measured several aspects of cognitive ability, and higher function, including visuospati­al skills, working memory, attention span, problem-solving, locational awareness fluency.

The MMSE cognitive performanc­e scores were significan­tly higher among the nappers than they were among those who did not nap. And there were signifiand verbal cant difference­s in locational awareness, verbal fluency, and memory.

This is an observatio­nal study, and so can't establish the cause. And there was no informatio­n on the duration or timing of the naps taken, which may be important, the researcher­s said.

But there are some possible explanatio­ns for the observatio­ns found, say the researcher­s. One theory is that inflammati­on is a mediator between mid-day naps and poor health outcomes; inflammato­ry chemicals have an important role in sleep disorders, note the researcher­s.

Sleep regulates the body's immune response and napping is thought to be an evolved response to inflammati­on; people with higher levels of inflammati­on also nap more often, explain the researcher­s.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India