Ginny Estupinian PhD, ABPP

Older adult getting the right amount of sleep
Elderly man sleeping on a matress and floating on clouds

THE SLEEP REGULARITY SWEET SPOT

We all know that getting enough sleep is important for our health and well-being. However, a new study suggests that when it comes to brain health, the regularity of our sleep patterns may be just as critical as the number of hours we spend snoozing.

The study, published in the Journal Neurology, analyzed data from over 88,000 people in the UK between the ages of 40 and 69. Participants wore wrist-based accelerometers that objectively tracked their sleep-wake patterns over a 7-day period. Researchers followed the participants for about 7 years to see who developed dementia.

The results revealed a surprising U-shaped relationship between sleep regularity and dementia risk. People with the most erratic, irregular sleep patterns had the highest rates of dementia. But, dementia risk then decreased as sleep patterns became more regular – up to a point.

Once sleep regularity passed the midpoint of the scale, dementia risk started climbing again. So, while having an unpredictable sleep schedule was linked to the highest dementia risk, having an overly rigid, unchanging sleep pattern was also associated with an uptick in risk, though not as steep.

This U-shaped pattern held true even after researchers controlled for other known dementia risk factors like age, sex, and genetics. It also remained after accounting for sleep duration and quality. This suggests that sleep regularity itself – the consistency in our sleep and wake times from one day to the next – may be an independent risk factor for dementia that deserves more attention.

Interestingly, the researchers found a similar U-shaped association between sleep regularity and brain volume in a subgroup of over 15,000 participants who underwent brain imaging. The most irregular and the most strictly regular sleepers both tended to have lower volumes of gray matter and a brain region called the hippocampus, which is critical for learning and memory. Brain volume increased as sleep patterns approached the midpoint of regularity.

Therefore, what makes sleep regularity so important for brain health? Researchers believe it may come down to circadian rhythms, our internal 24-hour “body clocks” that orchestrate the ebb and flow of biological processes, including the sleep-wake cycle. Erratic sleep patterns may disrupt these crucial rhythms, promoting inflammation and cellular stress that could contribute to brain deterioration over time.

On the flip side, the researchers speculate that hyper-regular sleep patterns may reflect an aging brain’s inability to adapt to changes and stressors. This rigidity and lack of flexibility could be an early sign of declining brain resilience.

While more research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms at play, these findings add to a growing body of evidence linking sleep disruptions to brain health issues like dementia. With dementia impacting millions worldwide, identifying modifiable risk factors is a public health priority.

What can we take away from this new research? The key seems to be finding a sleep schedule “sweet spot” – not wildly erratic, but not rigidly unchanging either. Aiming for consistent bed and wake times most days while still allowing some flexibility may help strike that balance.

Of course, this doesn’t mean we should obsess over perfect sleep regularity at the expense of other healthy habits. Sleep duration and quality still matter. However, this study suggests that sleep cadence and consistency merit more attention.

As researchers continue probing the complex connections between sleep and brain health, one thing remains clear: slumber is far more than a passive time-out from daily life. How, when, and how regularly we sleep may all play a role in steering the trajectory of our brain health over time. Unlocking the secrets of sleep may be key in the fight against dementia.

If you or a loved one are having issues with sleep quality, call my office and let me help you optimize your sleep and be the best you can be.