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Expecting an afternoon nap can reduce
Blood Pressure
Newswise — Where does
the benefit lie in an afternoon nap? Is it
in the nap itself--or in the anticipation of
taking a snooze? Researchers in the United
Kingdom have found that the time just before
you fall asleep is where beneficial
cardiovascular changes take place.
This finding is part of
a study entitled Acute Changes in
Cardiovascular Function During the Onset
Period of Daytime Sleep: Comparison to Lying
Awake and Standing, found in the online
edition of the Journal of Applied
Physiology, published by The American
Physiological Society. The study was
conducted by Mohammad Zaregarizi, Ben
Edwards, Keith George, Yvonne Harrison,
Helen Jones and Greg Atkinson, of the
Liverpool John Moores University in
Liverpool, U.K.
The
Afternoon Nap
Afternoon naps, or
siestas, are practiced in many Mediterranean
and Latin American countries such as Spain
and Argentina. They are typically short naps
or rest periods of no more than an hour that
are taken in the afternoon.
While earlier studies
on siestas have found that this practice may
slightly increase the risk of heart attack,
newer and more controlled studies have shown
an inverse relationship between siesta
taking and fatal heart attacks.
In a recent
epidemiological study of 23,000 people in
Greece, those who regularly took siestas
showed a 37% reduction in coronary mortality
compared to those who never nap, while
individuals who occasionally napped in the
afternoon had a reduction of 12%.
Why do afternoon naps
affect cardiovascular function? One reason
could be changes in blood pressure. At
night, our blood pressure and heart rate
decreases as we sleep. Some researchers
hypothesize that the lower blood pressure
reduces strain on the heart and decreases
the risk of a fatal heart attack.
Most studies have
focused on cardiovascular behavior in
nighttime sleeping. This study provides a
detailed description of changes in
cardiovascular function of daytime sleep in
healthy individuals, comparing napping with
other daytime activities such as standing
and lying down without going to sleep.
Nap
versus Conscious Rest
The researchers tested
nine healthy volunteers (eight men, one
woman) who did not routinely take afternoon
naps. The volunteers attended the university
laboratory on three separate afternoons
after sleeping four hours the night before.
The volunteers wore equipment that checked
blood pressure, heart rate, and forearm
cutaneous vascular conductance (which
determines dilation of blood vessels).
During one afternoon
session, the volunteer spent an hour
resting, lying face-up in bed. During
another session, the volunteer spent an hour
relaxed, but standing. And in one session,
the volunteer was allowed an hour to sleep,
lying face-up. During the sleep stage, the
researchers measured the volunteer’s
different stages of sleep.
The session in which
the volunteer was allowed to fall asleep was
delineated into three phases:
• Phase 1: A
five-minute period of relaxed wakefulness
before lights were turned off (volunteers
had been lying on the bed for a minimum of
15 minutes before this phase)
• Phase 2: The period between “lights out”
and the onset of Stage 1 sleep (loss of some
conscious awareness of the external
environment)
• Phase 3: The period between the Stage 1
and the onset of Stage 2 sleep (conscious
awareness of the external environment
disappears)
Changes
Found Only in Pre-Sleep
Researchers found a
significant drop in blood pressure during
the sleep trial, but not during the resting
or standing trials. What’s more, this drop
in blood pressure occurred mostly after
lights out, just before the volunteer fell
asleep.
This reduction in blood
pressure may be one explanation for the
lower cardiovascular mortality that some
studies have found among people who
habitually take siestas. On the other hand,
some studies of nocturnal sleep have shown
that blood pressure rises when we awake and
that more cardiac deaths occur in the
mornings. So the John Moores team will next
look at blood pressure during the waking
portion of the afternoon nap to see if this
period may also pose an increased danger of
coronary mortality.
For an audio version of
this release, including portions of an
interview with the principal author,
Professor Greg Atkinson, please go to
http://www.lifelines.tv.
Physiology is the study
of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs
function to create health or disease. The
American Physiological Society (www.The-APS.org)
has been an integral part of this scientific
discovery process since it was established
in 1887.
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