In this episode, my guest is Dr. Matt Walker, Professor of
Neuroscience and Psychology and the Founder & Director of the Center
for Human Sleep Science at the University of California, Berkeley. He
is also the author of the international best-selling book Why We Sleep
and the host of "The Matt Walker Podcast." We discuss the biology of
sleep, including its various stages and what specifically happens to
those stages when we don't get enough sleep. We also discuss the
effects of sunlight, caffeine, alcohol, naps, hormones, exercise,
marijuana, sexual activity, and various supplements on sleep. The
episode consists of both basic science information and many science-
supported actionable tools.
- Introducing Dr. Matt Walker
- Sponsors: Roka, InsideTracker, Belcampo
- What Is Sleep?
- REM (Rapid Eye Movement) aka 'Paradoxical Sleep'
- Slow Wave Sleep aka 'Deep Sleep'
- Compensating For Lost Sleep
- Waking in the Middle Of The Night
- Uberman (Not Huberman!) Sleep Schedule
- Viewing Morning SUNLight
- Caffeine
- Alcohol
- Growth Hormone & Testosterone
- Emotions, Mental Health & Longevity
- Books vs. Podcasts
- Lunchtime Alcohol
- Marijuana/CBD
- Melatonin
- Magnesium
- Valerian, Kiwi, Tart Cherry, Apigenin
- Tryptophan & Serotonin
- Naps & Non-Sleep-Deep-Rest (NSDR)
- Is It Possible To Get Too Much Sleep?
- Sex, Orgasm, Masturbation, Oxytocin, Relationships
- Unconventional Yet Powerful Sleep Tips
- Connecting to & Learning More from Dr. Walker
- The New Dr. Matt Walker Podcast, Reviews & Support
- Sleep #MattWalker #HubermanLab
-- Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and
science based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a
professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of
Medicine. Today I have the pleasure of introducing Dr. Matthew Walker
as our guest on the Huberman Lab podcast. Dr. Walker is a professor of
neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.
There, his laboratory studies sleep. They study why we sleep, what
occurs during sleep, such as dreams and why we dream, learning during
sleep, as well as the consequences of getting insufficient or poor
quality sleep on waking states. Dr. Walker is also the author of the
international best selling book "Why We Sleep". Our discussion today
is an absolutely fascinating one for anyone that's interested in
sleep, learning, or human performance of any kind. Dr. Walker teaches
us how to get better at sleeping. He also discusses naps, whether or
not we should or should not nap, whether or not we can compensate for
lost sleep, and if so how to best do that. We discuss behavioral
protocols and interactions with light, temperature, supplementation,
food, exercise, sex, all the variables that can impact this incredible
state of mind and body that we call sleep. During my scientific
career, I've read many papers about sleep and attended many seminars
about sleep yet my discussion with Dr. Walker today revealed to me
more about sleep, sleep science and how to get better at sleeping than
all of those papers and seminars combined. I'm also delighted to share
that Dr. Walker has started a podcast. That podcast entitled "The Matt
Walker Podcast", releases its first episode this month and is going to
teach all about sleep, and how to get better at sleeping. So be sure
to check out the Matt Walker podcast on Apple, Spotify or wherever you
listen to podcasts. Before we begin, I'd like to mention that this
podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is however part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost of
consumer information about science and science related tools to the
general public. In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the
sponsors of today's podcast. Our first sponsor is ROKA. ROKA makes
sunglasses and eyeglasses that are of the absolutely highest quality.
The company was founded by two all American swimmers from Stanford and
everything about the design of their glasses is with performance in
mind. I've spent my career studying the visual system and how it works
and I can tell you that ROKA glasses take into account the science of
the visual system such that whether or not you're wearing them on a
very bright day, or you walk into a shadowed area or there's cloud
cover, you can still see everything with perfect clarity. That also
reflects the fact that the lenses that they use are of the absolute
highest optical quality. The other terrific thing about ROKA
sunglasses and eyeglasses is that they're designed to be worn in all
conditions. You can use them while running, while cycling, even if you
get sweaty, they won't slip off. And they look great. One problem I
have with a lot of so called performance eyeglasses and sunglasses out
there is that they look crazy. They make people look like cyborgs.
ROKA glasses have a terrific aesthetic, you can wear them to dinner,
you can wear them at work, and you can wear them in all sorts of
sports activities. If you'd like to try ROKA glasses, you can go to
ROKA, that's roka.com and enter the code Huberman to save 20% off your
first order. That's ROKA roka.com and enter the code Huberman at
checkout. Today's podcast is also brought to us by InsideTracker.
InsideTracker is a personalized nutrition platform that analyzes data
from your blood and DNA to help you better understand your body and
then reach your health goals. I've long been a believer in getting
regular blood work done for the simple reason that many of the factors
that impact your immediate and long term health can only be analyzed
from a quality blood test. And nowadays, with the advent of DNA tests,
you can also get insight into your immediate and long term health by
way of understanding your DNA. One issue with many DNA and blood
tests, however, is that you get the numbers back about metabolic
factors, hormones, genes, et cetera, but there's no directive as to
what to do with that information. With InsideTracker, they have a very
easy to use dashboard, and that dashboard not only gives you your
numbers, but it gives you simple directives related to nutrition,
supplementation, exercise and other lifestyle factors that allow you
to move those numbers into the ranges that are right for you and your
health goals. If you'd like to try InsideTracker, you can go to
insidetracker.com/Huberman and if you do that, you'll get 25% off any
of InsideTracker's plans, just use the code Huberman at checkout.
Today's episode is also brought to us by Belcampo, Belcampo is a
regenerative farm in Northern California that raises organic grass fed
and finished certified humane meats. I don't eat a lot of meat, I eat
meat about once a day, but when I do, I make sure that it's high
quality and both humanely and sustainably raised. Conventionally
raised animals are confined to feedlots and eat a diet of inflammatory
grains, but Belcampo's animals graze on open pastures and seasonal
grasses, resulting in meat that's higher in nutrients and healthy
fats. Now, I've talked many times before on this podcast about how
getting sufficient levels of omega threes is very important for
metabolic health, hormone health, mood, essentially all aspects of
one's health. Belcampo meats have high levels of omega threes, because
of the grasses they feed on. The way Belcampo raises its animals isn't
just better for our health, it also has a positive impact on the
environment. They practice regenerative agriculture, which means that
their meat is climate positive and carbon negative, meaning it's good
for you, and it's good for the environment. You can order Belcampo's
sustainably raised meats to be delivered to you using my code Huberman
by going to belcampo.com/Huberman and if you do that, you'll get 20%
off your first order. I'm a big fan of their keto meatballs I also
really liked their boneless rib eyes, I eat those pretty much once a
day.
Again, that's Huberman for the code. And it's belcampo.com/huberman
for 20% off your order. And now my discussion with Dr. Matt Walker.
Great to finally meet you in person. -- Wonderful to connect. I
mean, it's been too long, but I suspect it would have been a shorter
time before we'd met lest the pandemic, thank you for coming up. --
No, thank you, yeah, I'm delighted that we're finally sitting down
face to face. I've been tracking your work both in the internet
sphere, and I read your book and loved it. And also from the
perspective of science, you actually came to Stanford couple of years
ago and gave a lecture for BrainMind. -- Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
-- And there, of course, you talked about sleep and its utility and
its challenges and how to conquer it, so to speak. Let's start off
very basic, what is sleep? -- Sleep is probably the single most
effective thing you can do to reset your brain and body health. So
that's a functional answer in terms of, you know, what is sleep in
terms of its benefits. Sleep as a process though, is an incredibly
complex physiological ballet. And if you were to recognize or see what
happens to your brain and your body at night, during sleep, you would
be blown away. And the paradox is that most of us, and I would think
this too, you know, if I wasn't a sleep scientist, we go to bed, we
lose consciousness for seven to nine hours, and then we sort of wake
up in the morning, and we generally feel better. And in some ways that
denies the physiological and biological beauty of sleep. So upstairs
in your brain, when you're going through these different stages of
sleep, the changes in brainwave activity are far more dramatic than
those that we see when we're awake. And we can speak about deep sleep
and what happens there, REM sleep is a fascinating time, which is
another stage of sleep, often called dream sleep, which is rapid eye
movement sleep, that stage of sleep some parts of your brain are up to
30%, more active than when you're awake. So again, it's kind of
violating this idea that our mind is dormant. And our body is just
simply quiescent and resting. So I would happy to just sort of double
click on either one of those, and also what changes in the body as
well. But it is an intense evolutionary adaptive benefit and system.
That said, though, I would almost push back against an evolved system
when we think about the question of sleep and what sleep is. Our
assumption has always been that we evolved to sleep. And I've actually
questioned that and I have no way to get in a time capsule and go back
and prove this, but what if we started off sleeping, and it was from
sleep, that wakefulness emerged? Why do we assume that it's the other
way around? And I think there's probably some really good evidence
that sleep may have been the proto state, that it was the basic
fundamental living state. And when we became awake, as it were, we
always had to return to sleep. You know, in some ways, at that point,
sleep was the price that we paid for wakefulness. And that's another
way of describing what sleep is. But again, I think it sort of denies
that the active state of sleep, it's not a passive state of sleep
either. And then finally, you can say what is sleep across different
species? And in us human beings, and in all mammalian species and
avian species as well, sleep is broadly separated into these two main
types. And we've got non rapid eye movement sleep on the one hand, and
then we've got rapid eye movement sleep on the other. And we can speak
about how they unfold across a night and their architecture because
it's not just intellectually interesting from the perspective of what
sleep is, it's also practically impactful for our daily lives. And I'd
love to sort of go down that route too. But you navigate, you tell me
I can. -- No, no, let's definitely go down that route.
So you mentioned how active the brain is, during certain phases of
sleep. When I was coming up in science, REM sleep, rapid eye movement
sleep was referred to as paradoxical sleep, is that still a good way
to think about it? Paradoxical because the brain is so active, and yet
we are essentially paralyzed, correct? -- Yeah, it really is a
paradox. And where that came from was simply the brainwave recordings,
that if all I'm measuring about you, is your brainwave activity, it's
very difficult for me sitting outside of the sleep laboratory room to
figure out, are you awake, or are you in REM sleep? Because those two
patterns of brain activity are so close to one another, you can't
discriminate between them. Yet, the paradox is that when you are
awake, I go in there and you're sort of sitting up, you're clearly
conscious and awake. But yet, when you go into REM sleep, you are
completely paralyzed. And that's one of the I think that's part of the
paradox. But the paradox really just comes down to two dramatically
different conscious states. Yet, brain activity is dramatically more
similar than different. And the way I can figure out which of the two
you are in is by measuring two other signals, the activity from your
eyes and the activity from your muscles. So when we're awake, we will
occasionally have these blinks, and we'll have sort of seek heads. But
during REM sleep, you have these really bizarre, horizontal shuttling
eye movements that occur. And that's where the name comes from rapid
eye movements. -- Are they always horizontal? -- Mostly, they are
horizontal. - That's interesting. -- And that's one of the ways that
we can differentiate them from other waking eye movement activity,
'cause it's not always like it can be sometimes horizontal, but can
also have diagonal and also vertical in that plane. But then the
muscle activity is the real dead giveaway, just before you enter REM
sleep, your brainstem, which is where the dynamics of non REM and REM
are essentially played out and then expressed upstairs in the cortex
and downstairs in the body, when we go into REM sleep, and just a few
seconds before that happens, the brainstem sends a signal all the way
down the spinal cord. And it communicates with what are called the
alpha motor neurons in the spinal cord which control the voluntary
skeletal muscles. And it's a signal of paralysis. And when you go into
dream sleep, you are locked into a physical incarceration of your own
body. - Amazing. -- You know, why would Mother Nature do such a
thing? And it's in some ways very simple. The brain paralyzes the body
so that the mind can dream safely. Because think about how quickly we
would have all been popped out of the gene pool. You know, if I think
I'm, you know, one of the best skydivers who can just simply fly, and
I've had some times those dreams, too, you know, and I get up on my
apartment window, and I leap out. -- You're done. - You're done, you
know. So that's one of the sort of that's part of the paradox of REM
sleep, both it's brain activity similarity, despite the behavioral
state being so different and this bizarre lockdown of the sort of
brain of the body itself. Now, of course, the involuntary muscles
thankfully aren't paralyzed. So you keep breathing, your heart keeps
beating. -- Is this why men have erections during REM sleep, and
women have vaginal lubrication during sleep? -- That's one of the
reasons part of the other reason though there is because of the
autonomic activity. So there is a nervous, a part of our nervous
system called the autonomic nervous system, and it controls many of
the automatic behaviors. And some of those are aspects of our
reproductive facilities. During REM sleep, what we later discovered is
that you go through these bizarre what we call autonomic storms, which
sounds dramatic, but it actually is when you measure them. That you'll
go through periods where your heart rate, decelerates and drops and
your blood pressure goes down and then utterly randomly, your heart
rate accelerates dramatically, and what we call the fight or flight
branch of the autonomic nervous system or the sympathetic nervous
system, badly named 'cause it's anything but sympathetic, it's very
aggravating, that all of a sudden fires up and then it shuts down
again. And it's not in any regular way. And it's when you get those
autonomic storms, you get very activated from a physiologic
perspective that you can have these erections and you have vaginal
discharge et cetera. -- But you're totally paralyzed? -- But you
are still paralyzed. There are only two voluntary muscle groups that
are speared from the paralysis, bizarre. One, your extra ocular
muscles, because if they were paralyzed, you wouldn't be able to have
rapid eye movements. And the other that we later discovered was the
inner ear muscle. And we've got no good understanding as to why those
two muscles groups are speared from the paralysis. It may have
something to do with cranial nerve but I don't think it's that, I
think it's perhaps something more sensory related. Some people have
argued that the reason the eyeballs are speared from the paralysis is
because if your eyeballs are left for long periods of time, inactive,
you may get things such as oxygen sort of issues in the aqueous or
vitreous humor. And so the eyeballs have to keep draining. -- The
drainage systems of the anterior eye are made to require movement. -
Exactly. -- People with glaucoma have deficits in drainage through
the anterior chamber, but there I'm speculating. I'm also speculating,
when I ask this, I would imagine that there are states in waking that
also resemble slow wave sleep, or rather that there are states that
slow wave sleep also resembles waking states.
You've beautifully illustrated how REM sleep can mimic some of the
more active brain states that we achieve in waking. What sort of
waking state that I might have experienced or experience on a daily
basis might look similar to slow wave sleep, non REM sleep, if any?
-- It's a genius way of thinking about it turns the tables I love it.
We almost never see anything like the true ultra slow waves of deep
non REM sleep. So we spoke about these two stages non REM and REM. Non
REM is further subdivided into four separate stages, stages, one
through four, increasing in their depth of sleep. So stages three and
four that's what we typically call deep non REM sleep. Stages one and
two light non REM. -- So maybe take me through the arc of a night
just so that. So I put my head down, well, for you, what time do you
normally go to sleep? -- So I'm usually sort of around about 10:30pm
guy. And usually I'll naturally wake up sort of a little bit before
7:00, sometimes before 6:45 or 7:00, I have an alarm set for 7:04am.
-- You heard it here, folks Matt Walker does use an alarm clock. --
I rarely, rarely I'm usually sort of. -- He doesn't recommend it,
but he does use it. -- Yeah, I usually. - You're human after all.
-- Oh, I am so human. And I've had my sleep issues and I'd love to
speak about that too. But it's only just, you know, in the event that,
you know, 'cause I like to keep regularity too. You've got to keep
those two things in balance. And 7:04 just because, you know, why not
be idiosyncratic. I don't know why we always set things on these hot
numbers. So yep so when you. -- So you go to sleep around 10:30, so
using you as an example, because I imagine a number of people go to
sleep at different times. But 10:30 is about when I go to sleep, 11 is
for me. But so you go to sleep at 10:30, so for that first, let's say
three hours of sleep, what does the architecture of that sleep look
like as compared to the last three hours of your sleep before morning?
-- Yeah, so I should note that that sort of, you know, 10:30 to 7:00
that's just based on my chronotype and my preferential it's different
for different people. I'm not suggesting that that's the perfect sweet
spot for humanity's sleep. It's just my natural sweet spot. -- But I
imagine most people probably go to sleep somewhere between 10pm and
midnight. -- It's somewhere between 9 and midnight. -- And most
probably wake up between 5am and 7am or 5:30 and 7:30. -- Yeah, yeah
at least in if you look at sort of first world nations, that's a
typical sleep profile. So when I first fall asleep, I'll go into the
light stages of non REM sleep stages one and two of non REM. And then
I'll start to descend down into the deeper stages of non REM sleep. So
after about maybe 20 minutes, I'm starting to head down into stage
three non REM and then into stage four non REM sleep. And as I'm
starting to fall asleep, as I've cast off from the usually with me,
murky waters of wakefulness, and I'm in the shallows of sleep stages
one and two, my heart rate starts to drop a little bit. And then my
brainwave pattern activity starts to slow down. Normally when I'm
awake, it's going up and down, maybe 20, 30, 40, 50 times a second. As
I'm going into light, non REM sleep, it will slow down to maybe 15, 20
and then really starts to slow down down to about sort of 10 or eight
cycles per second, eight cycle waves per second. Then as I'm starting
to move into stages three and four, non REM sleep, several remarkable
things happen. All of a sudden, my heart rate really does start to
drop. Oh, and I'll come back to temperature, I'm going to write
temperature down 'cause I always forget these things. Now I'm solidly
in the foothills of middle age. So as I'm starting to go into those
deeper stages of non REM sleep, all of a sudden, hundreds of thousands
of cells in my cortex all decide to fire together and then they all go
silent together. And it's this remarkable physiological coordination
of the likes that we just don't see at during any other brain state.
-- That's really interesting, other than recordings from the brains of
animals and a little bit from humans, I don't think I've ever seen the
entire cortex or even entire regions of cortex light up like that.
-- Yeah, it's stunning. It's almost like this beautiful sort of mantra
chant, or this sort of, you know, it's a slow inhale and then a
meditative exhale, inhale, exhale. And these waves are just enormous
in their size. -- And the body is capable of movement at this time,
there is no paralysis. -- There is no paralysis, but for the most
part, muscle tone has also dropped significantly. -- Interesting. -
At that point. And then you will, or I will then stay there for about
another 20 or 30 minutes. So now I'm maybe 60, or 70 minutes into my
first sleep cycle. And then I'll start to rise back up, back up into
stage two non REM sleep. And then after about 80 or so minutes, I'll
pop up, and I'll have a short REM sleep period, and then back down, I
go again, down into non REM, up into REM. And you do that reliably,
repeatedly, and I will be doing that, and I do do that every 90
minutes. At least that's the average for most adults, it's different
in different species. What changes to your question is the ratio of
non REM to REM within that 90 minute cycle as you move across the
night. And what I mean by this is, in the first half of the night, the
majority of those 90 minute cycles are comprised of a lot of deep non
REM sleep, that's when I get my stage three and four of deep non REM
sleep. Once I push through to the second half of the night, now that
seesaw balance changes. And instead, the majority of those 90 minute
cycles are comprised either of this lighter form of non REM sleep,
stage two non REM sleep, and much more and increasingly more rapid eye
movement sleep. And the implication that I was sort of speaking about
pragmatically is, let's say that I have to, and I usually never do
early morning flights or red eyes, just because I'm a mess if that
happens, I'm not suggesting other people shouldn't. -- I'm
suggesting people not not do that. Every time I've taken a red eye or
I've done that two or three days later, I get some sort of general
feeling of malaise, my brain doesn't work as well, I think red eyes
should be abolished. For the pilots too I mean, and for the. -- And
we can speak about those, there's data. -- And for the emergency
room, I mean, long shifts have been shown to lead to, you know,
physician induced errors that lead to a lot of fatalities. I mean,
there are a lot of reasons why staying up too long, or being up at the
wrong times, if you're not adapted to it is just terrible. -- You
have the data and all of those cases, you know, particularly
physicians too there was some recent data looking at suicidality. And
the rates of suicide in training physicians are, you know, far, far
above the norm. And I don't suspect that, you know, the schedules are
helping them I suspect that sleep is a missing part of that
explanatory equation, but. -- I teach medical students and they
they're phenomenal, but yeah, they're under extremely challenged
conditions. -- We shouldn't put them under those conditions. -
[Andrew] No, it's not optimizing performance, I have one. -- But
sorry, I was sorry. -- No, no, this is important. These it's an
important digression.
I have one question, which is you're saying that as across the night,
a greater percentage of these 90 minute cycles are going to be
occupied by REM sleep as you progress through the night. I'm aware
that, based on work that you've done and from your public education
efforts and others that we have so called circadian forces, and we
have other forces that are driving when we sleep and when we want to
sleep, etcetera. Without going into the details of those, I've a
simple question, the experiment is the following. Let's say, God
forbid, you are prevented from going to sleep at your normal time and
you stay up for the four hours or five hours that normally you would
be in predominantly slow wave sleep. -- If let's say you finally get
to lie down at 3am a time when normally your sleep would be occupied
mostly by rapid eye movement sleep, will you experience a greater
percentage of rapid eye movement sleep because of these so called
circadian forces, meaning that's what's appropriate for that time? Or
will your system need to start at the beginning of the race that were,
as I'm referring to it, that we're calling sleep? And for if that's
not clear to anybody, basically, what I'm asking is, if you are forced
to skip the slow wave sleep part of the night, will your system leap
into rapid eye movement sleep? Or does it have to start at the
beginning and get slow wave sleep first? In other words, does one
sleep state drive the entry to the next sleep state? -- Great
question, so there is some degree of reciprocity between the sleep
states I should note that when we drive one of those up, we often but
not always see a change in the other. There are some pharmacologies
that have shown an independence to that. And we've also played around
with things like temperature, and sometimes you can, you know, nudge
one and not seem to upset or perturb the other. But to your, I think,
lovely point, the answer is, it's a mix, but it's mostly the latter.
Meaning you will mostly go into your REM sleep phases, and be
significantly deficient in your deep sleep. So just because I start my
sleep cycle at 3am, rather than at 10:30pm, it doesn't mean that my
brain just says, well, I've got a program, and I'm just going to run
the program, and the way the program runs is that we always start with
a first couple of hours of deep sleep. So we're just going to begin
act number one, scene one, it doesn't do that. Now, I will get some
deep sleep to begin with and part of that is just because of how sleep
works. Based on how long I've been awake, longer I'm awake, there is a
significantly greater pressure for deep sleep. But we actually use
exactly what you just described as an experimental technique to
selectively deprive people of one of those stages of sleep or the
other. So we will do first half of the night deprivation, and then let
you sleep the second half. So that means that you will be mostly deep
sleep deprived, and you will still get mostly all of your REM sleep.
And then we switch it, so you only get your first four hours, which
means you will mostly get deep non REM sleep, but you will get almost
no REM sleep. So in both of those groups, they've both had four hours
of sleep. So the difference between them in terms of an experimental
outcome is not the sleep time because they both slept for the same
amount. It's the contribution of those different stages. Now, we
actually have more elegant methods for sort of selectively going in
there and scooping out different stages of sleep. But that's the way
we used to do it old school was just using this timing difference.
-- And who suffers more? Those that lack the early phase, and were
those that lack the later phase of the night sleep? In other words, if
I have to sleep only four hours for whatever reason, am I better off
getting the early part of the night's sleep or the second half of the
night sleep? -- Depends on what the outcome measure is. -- So that
gets right to the differences between slow wave sleep and REM. --
Right. - I was probably misinformed. But my understanding a very crude
understanding I should say before. -- I very much doubt I'll
contrary with someone like you. -- Which is that's very nice of you.
The first part of the night the slow wave sleep is restorative to the
musculature to motor learning, and that the dream content tends to be
less emotional. The second half of the night, being more emotional
dreams and sort of the unpairing of the emotional load of our previous
day and other experiences. So in other words, if I were to deprive
myself, excuse me of REM, I would be hyper emotional, not maybe not as
settled with the kind of experiences of my life. Whereas if I deprive
myself of slow wave sleep, I would feel a more physical malaise. Is
that correct? Or is that far too simple? And if it is too simple,
please tell me where I'm wrong? -- No, I think much of that is
correct. And it's sort of that plus. So for example, during deep non
REM sleep, that's where we get this. It's almost a form of natural
blood pressure medication. And so when I take that away from you, the
next day, we're usually going to see autonomic dysfunction, we're
usually going to see abnormalities in heart rate blood pressure. We
also know that during deep non REM sleep, that there is a certain
control of specific hormones. For example, we know that the insulin
regulation of sort of metabolism, meaning how will you look from a
regulated blood sugar perspective versus dysregulated, pre diabetic
look of profile. That's where deep sleep seems to matter if we
selectively deprive you of that we can see. -- Growth hormone. -
Growth hormone is different actually. So that's a beautiful
demonstration where growth hormone seems to be more REM sleep
dependent. And that's why we can come on to the effects of alcohol and
there's some really impressive frightening data on alcohol and it's
disruption of sleep. But then we also know testosterone, peak levels
of testosterone happen during REM sleep. -- So the second half of
the night, essentially. -- Which is the second half of the night. So
it really just means that the, your profile of mental and physical
dysfunction will be different under both of those conditions. Which
one would you prefer? I would prefer neither of them. And it really
depends on what you're trying to optimize for. So it's just so
complicated, sleep is just so pluripotent, you know, it's so
physiologically systemic, that it's almost impossible not to undergo
one of those two things, just deep sleep deprivation, or just REM
sleep deprivation, and not show a profile that you would really prefer
to avoid. And that's the reason from an evolutionary standpoint, that
we've preserved those stages of sleep. I mean, sleep is just so
idiotic, you know, from an evolutionary perspective. -- Or maybe
waking is idiotic. -- Or waking is, you know, well, yeah. -- Based
on your previous idea. -- Who've you been talking to? I think that
comment is very specific to me. Yeah, I am normally always an idiot
when working. But I think this idea that sleep, you know, is so
profoundly detrimental to us, if you were to take it at face value,
you know, you're not finding a mate, you're not reproducing, you're
not foraging for food, you're not caring for you're young and worst of
all, you're vulnerable to predation, on any one of those grounds sleep
probably should have been selected against. But it wasn't sleep has
fought its way through heroically every step along the evolutionary
path. And therefore, every sleep stage has also survived as best we
can tell. What that means is that those are non negotiable. If mother
nature had found a way to even just sort of, you know, thin slice some
of that sleep from us, there would have been vast, I'm sure
evolutionary benefits, but looks as though she hasn't. And I'm usually
in favor of her wisdom after 3.6 million years, so.
-- Yeah, it's incredible. I want to introduce a another
Gedankenexperiment, other thought experiment. So in this arc of the
night, slow wave sleep predominates early in the night, and then REM
sleep. There's a scenario that many people including myself experience
on a regular basis. Which is they go to sleep, sleeping just fine,
three, four hours into it, they wake up. They wake up, for whatever
reason, maybe there was a noise, maybe the temperature isn't right, we
will certainly talk about sleep hygiene, etcetera. They get up, they
go to the restroom, they might flip on the lights, they might not,
they'll get back in bed hopefully they're not picking up their phone
and starting to browse and wake up the brain through various
mechanisms light and cognitive stimulation, etcetera. They go back to
sleep, let's say after about 10, 15 minutes, they're able to fall back
asleep. And then they sleep till their more typical wake time. How
detrimental is that wake up episode or event in terms of longevity,
learning, et cetera? I would love to sleep the entire night through
every night, but most nights I don't. And yet, I feel pretty good
throughout the day, some days better than others. So if you were to
kind of evaluate that waking episode, and compare it to sleeping the
whole night through, what are your your thoughts on that? -- So I
think if you're waking up sort of frequently, as you're describing, I
would probably get your estate in order because my guess is within the
next year, you're going to be you're going to be done for, no I'm
kidding you. Absolutely kidding you. It is perfectly natural and
normal, particularly as we progress with age, you know, children tend
to have typically more continuous sleep. Now it's not that they aren't
waking up for brief periods of time they are and in fact, we all do.
When we come out the other end of our sleep cycle at the end of our
REM sleep period of the 90 minute cycle, almost everybody wakes up and
we make a postural movement, we turn over because we've been paralyzed
for so long and the body will also like to shift it's weight or
position. -- Do we ever look around? Ever open our eyes and look
around? -- You, sometimes people will open their eyes, but usually
it's only for a brief period of time and they usually never commit
those awakenings to memory. Your situation and it's my situation as
well, I usually now at this stage of life, I don't sleep through the
night. I'll usually have a bathroom break and then I'll come back.
That's perfectly normal. We tend to forget that in sleep science, we
think of sleep efficiency so of the total amount of time that you're
in bed, how much of that percent time is spent asleep? And we usually
look to numbers that are above 85%, or more as a healthy sleep
efficiency. So if you're to think about me going to bed and I spend,
you know, let's say, eight and a quarter, eight and a half hours of
time in bed, with a normal, healthy sleep efficiency, I still may be
only sleeping a total of seven and a half hours, or seven and three
quarter hours. Meaning that I'm going to be awake in total, not in one
long about, but I'm going to be awake for upwards of 30 minutes, net
some time. Sometimes that can be after a 10 minute, you know,
dalliance after having gone to the bathroom, and I'm just gradually
drifting back off again. Other times, it will just be for a couple of
minutes. And most of those you don't commit. So I think we need to
stop, we don't need to get too worried about, you know, periods of
time awake, just because we're not sleeping throughout the night. I
would love to do that, too. And I remember when that used to happen,
and it still happens occasionally. -- Every once in a while, it
feels great when it does happen. -- And it's a lovely thing. --
It's a surprise right? Like oh my goodness I slept through the whole
night. -- It is now a surprise, yeah it is a surprise. But for the
most part, I think we can be more relaxed about that where we have to
be a bit more attentive, though, is if you're spending long periods of
time, not being able to get back to sleep. And usually we define that
by saying, if it's been 20, 25 minutes, normally, that's the time when
we would really say okay, let's explore this, what's going on? Let's
see what's happening. The other thing is if it's happening very
frequently, so even if you're, you know, not awake for 25 minutes
stretches, but you're finding yourself waking up and being consciously
aware that you've woken up for maybe six, seven or eight times
throughout the night and your sleep is very what we call fragmented
the great science of sleep in the past five or 10 years has been yes,
quantity is important, but quality is just as important. And you can't
have one without the other in terms of a good beneficial next day
outcome. You can't just get four hours of sleep, but brilliant quality
of sleep and be unimpaired. Nor can you get eight hours of sleep, but
have very poor quality of sleep and be unimpaired the next day. So
that's why I just sort of want to asterisk, this idea of let's not get
too worried about waking up and having some time awake, that's
perfectly normal and natural. But if it's happening very frequently
throughout the night, or those periods of time, or long stretches of
time, upwards of 25 minutes, then let's look into it. -- Well, I can
assure you just helped a lot of people feel better about this waking
up episode that I and many other people experience. -- I hope so
'cause I think it's really important that we, you know, I think I've
been desperately guilty of perhaps, you know, early on being too
puritanical about, you know, sleep and I've retrospected, and I've
tried to explore why this was the case, you know, it was almost sleep
or else, dot, dot, dot. And at the time when I was starting to write
the book, which was back in 2016, you know, sleep was still a
neglected stepsister in the health conversation of today. And I could
see all of the, -- That has certainly changed. -- And it's
changing, you know, and not because it's my efforts, but because of
all of my colleagues. -- I would say, well, it's great that you give
attribution to the other people involved. And of course, it's a big
field. But I think you've done a great service by cueing people to the
importance of this state, not just for avoiding troublesome outcomes,
but also for optimizing their waking state. It's really, you know, I
view sleep as this period that feels good, but we're not aware of how
it feels when we're in it necessarily. It has tremendous benefits when
you're doing it well, so to speak, and it has tremendous deficits when
we're not. And I think it was an important thing for you to do to cue
people to this issue. And I would say mission accomplished, that
people are aware of the need for sleep. I think that knowing that
waking up in the middle of the night is normal, provided it's not too
frequent is great and will also help people who may have been overly
concerned about that. I do want to use this as an opportunity to raise
something about the so called Uberman schedule not to be confused with
the Huberman schedule.
Fortunately, no one has confused those yet. Some years ago, there was
a discussion about the so called Uberman schedule, meaning the
Superman schedule. So that's Huberman without an H, which I have
nothing to do with. If you read your Nietzsche this will have a
subtext. But regardless, the Uberman schedule, as I understand is one
in which the person elects to sleep in 90 minute, bouts spread
throughout the day and night, in an attempt to get more productivity
and or reduce their overall sleep need. There was a paper published
recently that explored whether or not this is good or bad for us.
Maybe you just give us the take home message on that. -- Yes, so
these Uberman like schedules and there's lots of different forms of
that, they tried to essentially pie chart the 24 hour period, into
short bouts of sleep with some shorter or no, well, slightly longer
periods of wakefulness, then short bouts of sleep then wakefulness.
You know, you're, I sort of made it, I think a quip, it's almost like
you're sleeping like a baby, you know, 'cause that's the way that
babies will sleep. -- In 90 minute naps. -- That they will have,
you know, these brief naps, then they're awake, then they're asleep
then they're awake. And to the chagrin of parents across the night,
it's basically the same, they're awake, they're asleep, they're awake,
they're asleep. And that's more the schedule that these types of
protocols have suggested. And there was a really great comprehensive
review that found not only that they weren't necessarily helpful, but
they were actually really quite detrimental. And on almost every
performance metric, whether it be task performance, whether it be
physiological outcome measures, whether it even be the quality of the
sleep that they were having, when they were trying to get it, all of
those were in a downward direction. And it's not surprising if you
look at your the way that your physiology is programmed, if you look
at the way your circadian rhythm is programmed, none of that screams
to us that we should be sleeping in that way. -- Well, I'm chuckling
because we always hear sleep like a baby. This is how babies sleep.
And I would say don't sleep like a baby, sleep like an adult be an
adult, get your solid eight hours. -- It's Billy Crystal's line, he
was, you know, a long standing suffering insomniac, he says I sleep
like a baby, I'm awake every 20 minutes. You know, and I think this is
another one of those demonstrations that when you fight biology, you
normally lose. And the way you know you've lost is disease, sickness
and impairment. And I think if you sleep, in accordance with the
natural biological edict that we've all been given, life tends to be
both have a higher quality and a longer duration. -- Yeah, I agree.
Along those lines, as a vision scientists, I've been very excited by
the work on these non image forming cells in the eye, the so called
melanopsin cells that inform the brain about circadian time of day.
And I'm a big proponent of people getting some sunlight, ideally
sunlight, but other forms of bright light in their eyes early in the
day and when they want to be awake. Essentially, during the phase of
their 24 hour circadian cycle when temperature is rising, and then
starting to get less light in their eyes as our temperature is going
down in terms of later in the day and in the evening. Are there any
adjustments to that general theme that you'd like to add? Or is in any
way? -- No, I think that's exactly what we recommend right now.
Which is try to get at least 30 to 40 minutes of exposure to some kind
of natural daylight. Now, there may be parts of the world where, you
know, it's. -- You're from your from a rather cloudy part of the
world. -- I am from Liverpool, England, and the Northwest of England
is not known for its beach resorts and fine weather. I remember I sort
of, I went back home for a trip when I'd first been out in California,
and I thought, why is the sky so low? Just you know, constantly we
joke that in the UK, we usually have nine months of bad weather and
then three months of Winter. And then that's your entire year in terms
of climate. But to come to your point, you're exactly right, try to
get that daylight. Now it can be you know, working next to a window
and you're getting that natural sunlight. But that natural sunlight is
even on a cloudy day in England is usually far more potent than
anything that you'll get from indoor lighting, despite you thinking
sort of from a perception wise, maybe the much closer than I would
think. -- Yeah, I've been I'm sorry to interrupt. I've been a big
proponent of there's a an app called Light Meter, which will it's a
free app, I have nothing to do with it that will allow you to get a
pretty decent measurement of the amount of light energy coming toward
you. And if you hold it up to a cloudy morning, where you don't think
it's very bright out kind of a dismal day, you'll notice that there'll
be 1,000, 2,000, even you know, 5,000 Lux, Lux just being a measure of
brightness, of course. And then you can point the same light meter
toward an indoor light that seems very bright and very intense and
it'll say 500 Lux and you realize that the intensity as we gauge it,
perceptually is not really what the system is receiving. So outdoor
light is key. How do you get this natural stimulation? Or I should
just say light stimulation early in the day, what is your typical,
what does Matt Walker do to get this light stimulation? -- I am no
poster child, but usually I will, if I'm working out I usually work
out most days. And I shopped around and I found a gym that has huge
amounts of window exposure facing to the East. This is going to sound
so ridiculous you know, Matt Walker chooses a gym on the basis. -- I
love it - Of the solar impact so he cannot you know correct his
circadian. -- There are a lot of criteria for selecting gyms, this
one is actually grounded in physiology, and biology and so. -- And
selfishness about my own sleep. -- No it's great. So you get the
your exercise and your light stimulation simultaneously? -- That's
right, yep, yeah. -- And so you're stacking cues for wakefulness
early in the day. -- Exactly, so both exercise and daylight are
wonderful cues for circadian rhythm alignment, and also circadian
rhythm reset each day. And so I will use both exercise, I mean, I'm
neither a strong morning type or a strong evening type. And my
preference to exercise is probably sometime in the middle of the day,
probably somewhere around 1pm sorry, not 1am. But I'm usually working
out probably around the sort of seven, sort of 45 8am time, that's
usually when I'll start my workout. And there I will start with cardio
spin bike facing a window. And luckily, for the most part here in
California, there's usually sunlight coming through. But it doesn't
matter to me because just as you said, even when it's a cloudy day
that Lux coming through of light, the intensity is splendid. So I
would prefer to favor my exercise just because for efficiency too, I
want to get also working on the day, I'll try to match my exercise
more with my circadian light exposure than I would probably if I'm
going to do I really want to crush a workout, or do I want to just,
you know, make sure it's a good workout? I would prefer to work out,
you know, at a different time. But I like that because of the
daylight. And we can speak about exercise timing at some point,
because there's a lot of discussion around that, when is the right
time to exercise during sleep. And we can sort of bust some myths
there too. So I think you're spot on with the suggestion, get some
morning daylight, try to get that exposure, usually at least 30 to 40
minutes, there was some great work recently coming out in the
occupational health domain, where they moved workers from offices that
were just facing walls and you know, didn't have any exposure to
natural daylight. And then they did a time period during that study
where they actually were in front of a window and working. And they
measured their sleep and their sleep time and their sleep efficiency
increased quite dramatically. I'm forgetting the numbers now but I
think the increase in total sleep time is well over 30 minutes. And
the improvement in sleep efficiency was five to 10%. You know, and if
you're batting an 80%, you know, sleep efficiency average, we're a bit
concerned about that. But add 10% to that and now you're in you know,
a great echelon of healthy sleepers. And all you did was just spend
some time working in front of windows. -- That's great and probably
folks might want to consider spending a little less time with
sunglasses provided they can do that safely, you know, driving,
etcetera. You're not alone with your exercise behavior and facing
East. So the one and only Tim Ferriss told me recently that his
morning routine nowadays consists of jumping rope while facing East to
get the sunlight stimulation of the eyes. And as Matt and I both know,
it has to be of the eyes, right? These portals are the only way to
convey to the rest of the brain and body about the time of day and
wakefulness. Along the lines of wakefulness, I have a number of
questions about caffeine.
The dreaded and beloved caffeine, I love caffeine, but I like it in
relatively restricted periods of time. So I'm a big fan of waking up
and even though I wake up very groggy, allowing my natural wakefulness
signals to take hold, meaning I wake up very slowly, but I don't drink
caffeine right away. I sort of delay caffeine by a little while,
usually 90 minutes to two hours. And that idea came to me on the basis
of my understanding of how caffeine and the adenosine receptor
interact. I have a feeling you're going to pronounce adenosine
differently than I do. -- No, no, I will with that, I will go with
adenosine. -- I've tried to go with your skeletal instead skeletal
and synapse and synapse. -- Schedule and schedule. - There we go.
But to make it really simple for folks, how does caffeine work to make
us feel more alert? And does the timing in which we ingest caffeine
play an important role in whether or not it works for us or against
us? So maybe we just start with how does caffeine work? Why is it that
when I drink mate or coffee, which are my preferred sources of
caffeine, do I feel a mental and physical lift? -- Yeah so I'm going
to suggest counter to what most people would think, drink coffee. --
Or mate, is mate okay also? - [Matthew] Yeah, yeah, yeah. --
Whatever form you enjoy. -- We'll come on to sort of why I suggest
that but when it comes to coffee, I would say the dose and the timing
makes the poison. So let's start with how caffeine works. Caffeine is
in a class of drugs that we call the psychoactive stimulants. So it
works through a variety of mechanisms, one is a dopamine mechanism
dopamine we often think of as a reward chemical or, but dopamine is
also very much an alerting neurochemical, as well. And caffeine has
some role it seems to play in increasing dopamine. But its principal
mode of action, we believe in terms of making me more alert and
keeping me awake throughout the day is on the effects of adenosine.
And to explain what adenosine is from the moment that you and I woke
up this morning, this chemical adenosine has been building up in our
brain. And the longer that we're awake, the more of that adenosine
accumulates, -- Is it mask, may I ask, is it accumulating in neurons
in glia, or in the blood vessels? Where and is it also accumulating in
my body? Where is this adenosine coming from? And where is it
accumulating? -- Yeah, so the adenosine here that we're talking
about that is creating the sleep pressure is a central brain
phenomenon. And it comes from the neurons themselves combusting
energy. And as they're combusting energy, one of the offshoots of that
is this chemical adenosine. And so as we're awake throughout the day,
and our brain is metabolically very active, it's accumulating and
building up this adenosine. Now, the more adenosine that we have, the
sleepier that we will feel. So it really is like a sleep pressure is
what we call it. Now, it's not a mechanical pressure, don't worry,
your head's not going to explode, it's a chemical pressure. And it's
this weight of sleepiness that we feel gradually growing as we get
into the evening. -- May I just interrupt you again to just ask do
we know what the circuit mechanism is for that? I mean, not to go too
far down the rabbit hole, but for the aficionados and for myself, we
have brain mechanisms like locus coeruleus that are release things
that our brain areas locus coeruleus is just being a brain area, of
course that release things that proactively create wakefulness. So are
those neurons shutting down as a consequence of having too much
adenosine? Or are there areas of the brain that promote sleepiness
that are getting activated? Because these, you can imagine both things
working in parallel, one or the other would accomplish the same
endpoint? -- Yeah and it's both. And so there are two main receptors
for adenosine the A1 receptor and the A2 receptor. And they have
different modes of activating brain cells or inactivating or
decreasing the likelihood of firing. And adenosine works in this
beautiful, elegant way, where it will inhibit and shut down the wake
promoting areas of the brain whilst also increasing and dialing up the
volume on sleep activating, sleep promoting range. -- Biology is so
beautiful. - [Matthew] Oh it's fantastic. -- There's a push pull, I
mean, and we could have a larger discussion at some point about that,
everything seeing dark edges seeing light edges. Our ability to smell
or to sense pressure on this, everything's a push pull in Biology.
-- Oh it's great, yeah, yep. -- So this is another example where as
I am awake longer, adenosine is released in the brain. And my
wakefulness areas are being actively shut down by that adenosine and
my sleepiness brain areas, so to speak, are being promoted to be more
active, is that correct? -- That's right and it's a very progressive
process. It's not like a step function, where and sometimes that
happens occasionally, but it's usually because you've been sort of
driving through and as we'll come on to have caffeine in the system,
and then all of a sudden you just hit a wall and it just, you know
engulfs you and you go from zero to the one of sleepiness within a
short period of time. -- What explains the fatigue after a hard
conversation? The desire to go to sleep or desire to go to sleep
during a hard conversation? -- That's an interesting one. I think
it's usually just based on personality type interactions. And for the
most part. -- Not that I've ever experienced that before. -- No
people with you don't, but with me, they. -- Oh no, no, I've
experienced the desired to some conversations, I'm halfway through
them and I feel like I want to take a nap. -- Yeah. - Right. --
And I would love to look at you know, people's sleep history. We've
sort of seen that time and time again, but and then it could be, you
know, with folks like me, people just lose the will to live within
about five minutes of speaking with me, so. -- Not true, they hear
that sleep is important. [cross talking] -- Unrelated. - [Andrew]
That's awesome. -- And that's flattery, that's great. But so the way
that then caffeine comes into this equation, as they're saying, it's
usually a kind of a linear process. Or maybe it's probably closer to
an exponential in terms of your subjective feeling of sleepiness. And
we haven't really been able to measure that in humans, because
normally, we it's hard to actually, you know, stick something into the
brain and be, you know, sucking, siphoning off stuff every couple of
minutes, as you could do in animal studies. And keep asking people
every couple of minutes, how sleepy do you feel, how sleepy? And track
to see if there's a linear rise in, you know, adenosine, which then
creates an exponential rise in subjective sleepiness or what the
dynamics are, but I'm kind of nerding out. Caffeine comes into play
here, because caffeine comes into your system and it latches on to
those welcome sights of adenosine the adenosine receptors. But what it
doesn't do is latch on to them and activate them. Because if it was
doing that, then it would, you know, in lots of ways it would dial up
more sort of sleepiness. It does the opposite. The way that caffeine
works is that it comes in, competes with quite sharp elbows with
adenosine competitively forces them out of the way, hijacks that
receptor by latching onto it, but then just essentially blocks it. It
doesn't inactivate the receptor, it doesn't activate the receptor, it
functionally inactivates it in the sense that it takes it out of the
game for adenosine. So it's like someone you know, coming into a room,
and you're just about to sit down on the chair, and caffeine comes in
and just pulls out the chair. And you're like, well, now I've got
nowhere to sit. And caffeine just keeps pulling out the chairs from
adenosine and adenosine even though it's at the same concentration in
your brain, your brain doesn't know that you've been awake for, you
know, 10 hours, 16 hours at that point when you've downed a cup of
coffee. Because all of that adenosine that's still there can't
communicate to the brain that you've been awake for 16 hours because.
-- But the adenosine is still in brain circulation. -- Correct. - So
the real question is what happens when caffeine is dislodged from the
adenosine receptor? -- Unfortunate things happen. And that's what we
call the caffeine crash. Which is caffeine has a half life and it's
metabolized and. -- Do you recall what the half life is? -- Yeah,
the half life is somewhere between five to six hours. And the quarter
life therefore is somewhere between 10 to 12 hours. It's variable,
different people have different durations of its action, but for the
average adult five to six hours. That variation, we understand it's
down to a liver enzyme or a set of liver enzymes of the class that we
call the cytochrome P450 enzymes. And there are I think last I delved
into the data, which is pretty recently, there are two gene variants
that will dictate the enzymatic speed with which the liver breaks down
caffeine. And that's why you can have some people who are very
sensitive to caffeine and other people who say, you know, it just
doesn't affect me really that much at all. -- These are the people
that have a double espresso after a 9pm dinner and can sleep just
fine. -- Well, and we'll come onto. -- Well at least subjectively
they think they are sleeping. -- Subjectively, yeah, and we should
speak about that assumptive danger too. So then the caffeine is in the
system and after some time period, it will be inactive in the system.
So let's say that, you know, I've been awake for 12 hours now. And
it's you know, 8pm and I'm feeling a bit tired, but I want to push
through and I want to keep working for another couple of hours, so I
have a cup of coffee. All of a sudden I was feeling tired, but I don't
feel like I've been awake for 12 hours anymore. Because with the
caffeine in the system, maybe only half of that adenosine is being
communicated through the receptor to my brain. 100% of the adenosine
is still there, only half of it is allowed to communicate to my brain.
So now I think oh I haven't been awake for 12 hours, I've just been
awake for six hours, I feel great. Then after a few hours, and the
caffeine is starting to come out of my system, not only am I hit with
the same levels of adenosine that I had before I'd had the cup of
coffee several hours ago, it's that plus, all of the adenosine that's
been building up during the time that the caffeine has been in my
system. -- So sort of an avalanche of adenosine. -- It is a
tsunami wave, yeah and that's the caffeine crash. -- And it's
interesting because the caffeine crash at two o'clock in the afternoon
when you have work to do is a terrible thing. But what about the
person, maybe this person is me in my 20s, who says, I'm going to
drink caffeine all day long. And then I want the crash. Because at
nine or 10pm, if I stop drinking caffeine at say, 6pm, and I crash,
then I crash into a slumber, a deep night of sleep. Is that sleep
really as deep as I think it is? Because given the half life of
caffeine that you mentioned a few moments ago, I have to imagine that
having some of that caffeine circulating in my system might disrupt
the depth of sleep, or somehow the architecture of sleep in a way that
even if I get eight, or who knows even 10 hours of sleep, it might not
be as restorative as I would like it to be. -- Yeah, and that is the
danger, just sort of that, you know, those people that you described
who say, and I, a lot of them will speak with me too say, look, I can
have two espressos with dinner and I fall asleep fine and I stay
asleep. Because usually those are the two phenotypes that we typically
see with too much caffeine. I just can't fall asleep as easily as I
want to, or I fall asleep, but I just can't stay asleep. And caffeine
can do both of those things quite potently. -- How late in the day
do you think is assuming somebody, translate this folks, if you go to
bed earlier or later, you have to shift the hours accordingly. But
given somebody who typically gets into bed around 10:00, 10:30, and
falls asleep around 11:00, 11:30. When would you recommend they halt
caffeine intake? And these are not strict prescriptives, but I think
people do benefit from having some fairly clear guidelines of what
might work for them. Would you say cut off caffeine, by what time of
the day? -- I would usually say take your typical bedtime and count
back sort of somewhere between 10 to eight hours is probably getting a
little bit close. But take back sort of 10 hours or eight hours of
time, that's the time when you should really stop, you know, using
caffeine is the suggestion. And the reason is because for those people
who even just keep drinking up until you know, into the evening,
you're right, that they can fall asleep fine, maybe they stay asleep,
but the depth of their deep sleep is not as deep anymore. And so there
are two consequences. The first is that for me, and it can be up to by
30%, and for me to drop your deep sleep by 30%, I'd have to age you by
between 10 to 12 years, or you can just do it every night to yourself
with a couple of espressos. The second is that you then wake up the
next morning, and you think, well, I didn't have problems falling
asleep and I didn't have problems staying asleep, but I don't feel
particularly restored by my sleep. So now I'm reaching for three or
four cups of coffee the next morning, rather than just two or three
cups of coffee. And so goes this dependency cycle, that you then need
your uppers to wake you up in the morning, And then sometimes people
will use alcohol in the evening to bring them down because they're
overly caffeinated and alcohol, and we can speak about that, too, also
has very deleterious impacts on your sleep as well. So you're right
that it's not just the quantity of your sleep, or even difficulties
falling or staying asleep, it can also be deep sleep. But here again,
I think, you know, I don't want to be frightening people. And I
mentioned this before, I think one of the real problems that I or
mistakes that I made, because I didn't you know, I'd never had much
public exposure before the book. And I was so saddened by you know,
the disease and the suffering that I was seeing as a consequence of a
lack of sleep in our society. And the fact that it wasn't really being
discussed very much. I sort of came out, you know, a little bit
headstrong, more than a little bit headstrong. And I think I was, you
know, perhaps too much gas pedal and too little, you know, break as it
were. And I don't think that's the right way to approach a health
message within the public sphere. And I've become much softer in how I
think about these things. I have ideas about what the ideal world
looks like for sleep. But I also realize that none of us live in this
thing called the ideal world. -- We certainly don't. -- So, you
know, I want to be really mindful of that, and I think I've done a
really bad job of being sort of too forthright, particularly for
people who struggle with sleep, you know, early on, when I would offer
these sort of messages about sleep. I want to be, you know, I want to
be theoretical when it comes to the science, I want to be faithful to
the science. But I also don't want to go out and scare the living
daylights out of people, particularly people who are struggling with
their sleep, 'cause it's probably only going to make matters worse. So
I've been beautifully schooled by learning how to be a slightly better
public communicator. I'm nowhere near of the standing that you are,
you are very elegant and it's very intuitive to you. I'm still with
training wheels, but I'm getting a little bit better. But I just want
to say that when I'm speaking about caffeine, 'cause it sounds as
though I'm very sort of overt about it. But I will come back to why I
say drink coffee. But I just want to make that point. -- Yeah, well,
I appreciate you making that point. And I'm sure our listeners will
too. I still will stand behind my statement, which is that what you've
done for the notion that sleep is vital for all aspects of health and
for performance, mental and physical and wakefulness, the message and
the packaging it was contained in and is has been clearly clearly net
positive people needed to be cued to this. -- Thank you. - The I'll
sleep when I'm dead mentality is one that I had, it's one that other
people have. People in a huge number of vital communities, not just
your students, but also people that this the messaging that you
provided and continue to provide has positively impacted the first
responder community, the medical community, there're still steps that
need to be taken the military community, and of course, the civilian
community. And so I think these adjustments about yeah, caffeine is
okay, just restricted to the early part of the day, if you can, most
days, I mean, I think the law of averages. It's like the light viewing
behavior I think it is critical to view sunlight or natural, some
other form of bright light early in the day but if you miss a day,
it's not that your whole system is going to dissolve into a puddle of
tears. That'll happen on the second or the third day, no I'm kidding,
you've got a couple of days. Biology works in averages except with
respect to accident or injury. A car accident is a car accident,
right? You don't get to have three of those before the brain damage
occurs if the accident's severe enough. But with sleep behavior, these
homeostatic type behaviors, or with food, one chocolate sundae, is it
going to kill you know? No. Every night? Yeah. It's going to make you
demented and kill you early. We know this. And so I think the middle
ground is often a hard place to achieve. So I think you've done a
phenomenal job. But I appreciate you raising these points. And I think
it's clear that we all need to that we all can and should do certain
things better, including being gentle with ourselves from time to time
when we deviate from these ideal circumstances. Along these lines, I
do want to talk about alcohol because I think caffeine and alcohol
represent the the kind of two opposite ends of the spectrum.
Clearly there are other stimulants. There your Adderalls and your high
energy drinks that people use. But alcohol and caffeine are the most
commonly consumed stimulants and sedatives, depressants as they're
sometimes called. So what happens when somebody has a glass? We always
hear a glass or two of wine in the evening or a cocktail after dinner
or before dinner, how does that impact their sleep? And then we'll be
sure to circle back in terms of what is reasonable ranges of behavior
when it comes to avoiding alcohol or if it's age appropriate, et
cetera, enjoying alcohol? -- Yeah, so alcohol, if we're thinking
about classes of drugs, they're in a class of drugs that we call the
sedatives. And I think one of the first problems that people often
mistake, alcohol is often used as a sleep aid for people who are
struggling with sleep when things like over the counter remedies,
etcetera, or herbal remedies have just not worked out for them. And
alcohol, unfortunately, is anything but a sleep aid. The first reason
that most people use it is to try and help them fall asleep. -- So
and this process of this event that we call falling asleep, I have to
imagine is a process. -- It is a process. - Like everything in
biology, and that that process involves in some way, as we talked
about push pull before turning off thinking, planning, et cetera, and
turning on some sort of relaxation mechanism. I have to imagine that
these two things are knobs turning in opposite directions that gives
us this outcome we call falling asleep. Alcohol, it seems is helpful
for some people to turn off their thoughts or their planning. Is that
right? -- Yes, it is. And so I think, you know, if we look at the
pattern of brain activity, if I were to place you inside an MRI
scanner, where we're looking at the activity of your brain and watch
you drifting off, some parts of your brain will become less active.
Other parts will become more active. And this is the push pull model.
It's inhibition excitation. But alcohol is quite different in that
regard. Alcohol is because it's a sedative, what it's really doing is
trying to essentially knock out your cortex. It's sedating your
cortex, and sedation is not sleep. But when we have a couple of drinks
in the evening, when we have a couple of nightcaps, we mistake
sedation for sleep saying, well, I always when I have a couple of
whiskies or a couple of cocktails, it always helps me fall asleep
faster. In truth, what's happening is that you're losing consciousness
quicker, but you're not necessarily falling naturalistically asleep
any quicker. So that's one of the first sort of things just to keep in
mind. The second thing with alcohol is that it fragments your sleep.
And we spoke about the quality of your sleep being just as important
as the quantity. And alcohol through a variety of mechanisms, some of
which are activation of that autonomic nervous system, that fight or
flight branch of the nervous system. Alcohol will actually have you
waking up many more times throughout the night. So your sleep is far
less continuous. Now, some of those awakenings will be of conscious
recollection the next day, you'll just remember waking up, many of
them won't be. And so but yet, your sleep will be littered with these
sort of punctured awakenings throughout the night. And again, when you
wake up the next morning, you don't feel restored by your sleep, you
know, fragmented sleep or non continuous sleep in this alcohol induced
way, is usually not good quality sleep, but you feel great on the next
day. The third part of alcohol in terms of an equation is that it's
quite potent at blocking your REM sleep, your rapid eye movement
sleep. And REM sleep is critical for a variety of cognitive functions.
Some aspects of learning and memory it seems to be critical for
aspects of emotional and mental health. -- You've described it
before as a sort of self generated therapy that occurs while we sleep.
-- Yeah, it's overnight therapy, you know, it's emotional first aid.
-- Certainly people that don't get enough sleep are very easy to
derail emotionally. Not that one would want to do that to people, but
we all sort of fall apart emotionally. I always think of it as almost
like our skin sensitivity can be heightened. -- Yes, absolutely. -
When we are sleep deprived. Our emotional sensitivity is such that
when we're sleep deprived, such that it takes a much finer grain of
sandpaper to create that kind of friction, things bother us. -
[Matthew] Threshold to trigger. -- Even online comments bother us
when we're sleep deprived. and never when we're well rested. -- I
would love to say that I never look at them, except I look at. --
Well actually, here I. - [Matthew] Maybe every one of them. -- Here
I will editorialize because the notion of not looking at comments is
unreasonable to ask of any academic, because academics we are all
trained to look at our teaching evaluations. And just like with online
comments to ignore 20% of them, no, I'm kidding. We look at them all
in any event. So in terms of translating this to behavior, I'm not, I
don't particularly enjoy alcohol, I guess I might be fortunate in that
sense. But I also have never really experienced the pleasure of
drinking alcohol. I sometimes like the taste of a drink, but I never
like the sensation. So that's, I don't have a lot of familiarity with
this, but many people do, and I understand that. So let's say somebody
enjoys a glass of wine or two with dinner and they eat dinner at 7pm.
Is that likely to disrupt their sleep at all? Let's just sort of,
let's make this a series of gradations. -- And the answer is yes. I
think once they just looked at a single glass of wine in the evening
with dinner, and I would be untruthful if I didn't just simply say it
has an effect. And we can measure that in terms of. -- Less REM
sleep. -- Less REM sleep and one of the fascinating studies I can't
remember what dose I think they got them close to a standard illegal
blood alcohol level, so maybe they were a little bit tipsy. And yes,
you see all of the changes that we just described, they sort of lose
consciousness more quickly, they have fragmented sleep, and they have
a significant reduction in REM sleep.
But what was also interesting because REM sleep, as we spoke about
before, is a time when some hormonal systems are essentially recharged
and refreshed growth hormone being one of them, there was well over a
50% five zero drop in their growth hormone release during alcohol
laced sleep at night. -- And growth hormone is so vital for
metabolism and repair of tissues. -- Yeah, it's not just for kids. -
[Andrew] Keeping body fat low. -- This is essential in adults. --
It's essential, along those lines, I just want to highlight the fact
that this information that you're sharing that growth hormone is
released is strongly tethered to the presence of healthy amounts of
REM sleep is interesting to me, because I always thought the growth
hormone was released in the early part of the night. -- Well, it is
released across both of those, but across the different stages, but
what we also know is that when you disrupt REM sleep, there are those
growth hormone consequences. So it's not an exclusive system just like
with testosterone, we can see changes throughout non REM sleep, but if
you ask when are the peak release rates of testosterone, it's right
before we go into REM sleep, and then during REM sleep. -- And of
course, testosterone being important, both for males and females. --
For men and women, yeah. -- Right, for libido and tissue repair and
well being. Nobody, regardless of chromosomal, hormonal, or any other
background wants to have their normal levels of testosterone reduced
acutely, that's just a bad it equates to a terrible set of
psychological and physical symptoms. -- Yeah, and the mortality risk
that's associated with low testosterone is non trivial. - Prostate
cancer. -- Right, exactly, you know. So coming back to just the
point on REM sleep that you mentioned regarding emotional instability,
and we see that that's one of the things one of the most reliable
signatures of just insufficient sleep doesn't have to be sleep
deprivation.
What we've discovered over the past 20 years here at The Sleep Center,
is that there is no major psychiatric disorder that we can find in
which sleep is normal. And so I think that firstly told us there is a
very intimate association between your emotional mental health and
your sleep health. But when it also comes to REM sleep, I think what's
fascinating is that it's not just about your emotional health, it's
not just about your hormonal health we've also been seeing other
aspects of you know, cognition. But then there was a report, I think
it could have been about two years ago, out of Harvard, I think it was
Beth Clements group. They found that, and they replicated it in two
different large populations. If you look at the contribution of
different sleep stages to your lifespan, REM sleep was the strongest
predictor of your longevity. And it was a linear relationship. It
wasn't it sort of one of these U shaped or J shaped curves that we
often see with total sleep, and mortality risk, it really was linear.
That the less and less REM sleep that you were getting the higher and
higher your probability of death. And then they did. -- Was that
death due to natural causes or accident? 'Cause I can imagine if
you're not getting enough REM sleep, you're more likely to drive off
the freeway, step off a cliff. -- I think it was all cause mortal.
-- You just make bad decisions about anything in love relationships,
which can also be life threatening. -- Yeah, I've tried to lean into
that and claim that with those bad relationship situations, oh, I just
didn't have enough REM sleep last night. -- Blame it on the sleep. -
[Matthew] My darling you know. -- The REM sleep difference. --
And, but she's far wiser than I thought. But, so they did this great
machine learning analysis and I may get these numbers backwards. But I
think for every 5% reduction in REM sleep, there was a 13% associated
increased risk of mortality. And I could have, I'll have to go back
and check. But to me, and in the machine learning algorithm, what they
ultimately spat out was that of all of the sleep stages, REM sleep is
the most predictive of your longevity of your lifespan. So we often, I
hear people saying, how can I get more deep sleep? Or they sometimes
say how can I get more dream sleep? And my answer is a question. Why
do you want to get more of that? And they'll say, well, isn't that the
good stuff? And I'll say, well, actually all stages have good sleep.
-- It's all the good stuff. Well, it's like the exercise question and
it took decades, for people to understand that moving around for about
150, probably 180 minutes a week at doing endurance type work, zone
two cardio type work, it is correlated with living longer, feeling
better, less diabetes, etcetera. There's really no way around it. I
mean, you can ingest Metformin until the cows come home, you can take
NMN, all of which I think have their place in certain contexts I'm a
big fan of the work surrounding all those protocols. -- Yeah
likewise. - But without getting proper amounts of movement, meaning
sufficient numbers, it doesn't matter how many 12 minute exercise
regimes you follow per week, you need that threshold level. And it
sounds like the same is true of REM sleep and total amount of sleep.
There's just you pay the piper somehow. -- Yeah, the return on
investment I mean, to flip the coin, the return on investment is
astronomical, you know, I think of sleep it is the tide that moves,
you know, that raises all of those health boats. -- And the most
fundamental layer of mental and physical health. Whenever people ask
me, even though I'm not a physician, they'll ask me, you know, what
should I take or what should I do? The first question is always, how's
your sleep? -- Great, I love it. -- Meaning how well do you sleep
every night and how long do you sleep? And I always recommend your
book, I always recommend your podcast, you know, the podcasts you've
been a guest on, etcetera. Who knows, maybe you'll even release your
own podcast at some point soon and keep because I do think people need
to hear from you more often.
One thing I don't want to return to the notion of public health
discourse too much. But I do want to say one issue with books in
general, is that they can be revised, but it's more or less a one and
done kind of thing until the next book comes out. -- Yeah, yeah -
One thing I like about the podcast format is that updates can be
provided regularly. Corrections and updates as new data come out. And
so that's a wonderful aspect to this format. And hopefully the format
that you'll be embracing, I think the world needs to hear more from
you more often, about sleep, and its various contours, not less. And
so I do have a question about drinking alcohol.
Not that we want to promote day drinking, but let's say that the one
or two glasses of wine or cocktail is consumed with lunch, something
that isn't traditionally done nowadays, or in a late afternoon happy
hour type cocktail. And then one is going to sleep seven or eight
hours later, do you think that that will improve or somehow mitigate
the effects of alcohol? Or if you have a drink, are you are you
basically screwed for the next 24 hours? -- No, I think there's
going to be a time window dependency. Now, I don't know of anyone who
has essentially done what you and I would like, which is the time
separation dose dependent curve, where okay, you drink at 10am, then
or 11, 12 one, two, three, four, five all the way up to you know, 10pm
and estimate, what is the blast radius? And is it linear? Or is it
nonlinear? Is it such that only when you drink in the last four hours?
Do you just hit this exponential and it's bad, bad bad? Or is there
some other curve that we could imagine there will be many
possibilities. But certainly what we know is that the less alcohol and
the less and more specifically the metabolic byproducts, aldehydes and
ketones, they're the sort of the nefarious players. -- And not the
ketones that people are all excited about the other ketones, [cross
talking] the chemists know what we're referring to. -- But this is
not about ketogenesis, please don't think that. -- This is not about
ketogenesis, there are ketone bodies, and that are released after
ingesting alcohol that are not of the positive sort that a ketogenic
diet might promote. -- Right, so I think in terms of that alcohol
profile, we certainly know that, you know, as you're heading into the
evening hours, once again, timing and dose make the poison. But I
think it's also important, once again, from that public message
standpoint, and thank you, I think I am leaning into the sort of the
podcast consideration arena, at some point, but I don't want to be
puritanical here, you know, I'm just a scientist, and I'm not here to
tell anyone how to live. All I'm trying to do is empower people with
some of the scientific literature regarding sleep. And then you can
make whatever informed choices that you want. Now, unlike you, it
turns out, I'm not a big drinker. It's just because I've never liked
the taste. And I'm surprised that they haven't taken away my British
passport because I don't like lager or beer. But I also want to say
that life is to be lived to a certain degree, it's all about checks
and balances. So, you know, if I go out and you know, I have an ice
cream sundae, I'm not big on those either, but, you know, sure, I know
that my you know, blood glucose is not going to be ideal for another
12 hours maybe. That's just the price you pay for having some kind of
relaxed, fun life. I don't want to look back on life and think, gosh,
you know, I lived until I was, you know, 111 and it was utterly
miserable you know. -- Right. - So, but it's all about some kind of
a balance. And my job is not to tell people a prescription for life,
it's just to offer some scientific information. -- No, I think
you're doing a terrific job of that. People are I always say we have
all these neural circuits and if it's working properly, we all have a
circuit that allows us to skip over information or as we wish, right,
if the circuits between your brain and your thumbs are working you can
slide right along you can drop to the next content however you like.
I would like to ask about marijuana and CBD. This is a discussion that
I think five years ago would have ventured into the realm of illegal
but now in many places not all medical marijuana is approved or is
legal. And certainly it's in widespread use. Certainly not
recommending people do it. I have my own thoughts about marijuana CBD.
I've been fortunate, I suppose that I don't particularly like
marijuana or CBD. I don't even know if I've ever tried CBD. First of
all, does marijuana disrupt the depth of sleep, the architecture of
sleep? And if so, as with alcohol and caffeine does when you ingest it
or when it's in your bloodstream does, relative to when you go to
sleep, does that play an important role? So does marijuana disrupt
sleep? -- Yeah, it does. And there's a pretty good amount of data on
so we can break sort of cannabis down into two of its key ingredients.
We've got THC tetrahydrocannabinol, and we've got CBD and CBD is sort
of the less psychotic what we think of as the non psychoactive
components. In other words, when you take CBD, you don't get high. If
you take THC, you can get high. That's the psychoactive part of the
equation. -- Are both considered sedatives in the technical sense?
-- No, they're not. Neither of them have that class right now. THC
can, seems to speed up the time with which you fall asleep. But again,
if you look at the electrical brainwave signature of you're falling
asleep with and without that THC, it's not going to be an ideal fit.
So you could argue it's non natural, but many people use THC for that
fact, because they find it difficult to fall asleep. And it can speed
the onset of at least non consciousness, I guess is the best way of
describing it. But there are problems with THC. And they are twofold.
The first is that it too, but through different mechanisms seems to
block REM sleep. And that's why a lot of people when they're using
will tell me look, you know, I definitely, I was dreaming. Or I don't
remember, you know many of my dreams. And then when they stop using
THC, let's say I was having, you know, just crazy, crazy dreams and
the reason is because there is a rebound mechanism. REM sleep is very
clever. And alcohol is the same way in this sense, it's the same
homeostatic mechanism. Some people will tell me, look, if I have a bit
of a wild Friday night with some alcohol, you know, maybe I'll sleep
late into the next morning. And I'll just have these really intense
dreams. So and I thought I wasn't having any REM sleep, well, the way
it works is that it's during in the middle of the night, really, when
alcohol blocks your REM sleep. And your brain is smart it understands
how much REM sleep you should have had, how much REM sleep you have
not because the alcohol has been in the system. And finally, in those
early morning hours, when you're getting through to sort of, you know,
[cross talking] six, seven, 8:00am all of a sudden, your brain not
only goes back to having the same amount of REM it would have had, it
does that plus it tries to get back all of the REM sleep that it's
lost. Does it get back all of the REM sleep? No, it doesn't. It never
gets back all of the REM sleep, but it tries. And so you have these
really intense periods of REM sleep. Hence you have really intense
bizarre dreams. And that's what happens also with THC, you build up
this pressure for REM sleep, this debt for REM sleep, will you ever
pay it back? Doesn't seem as though you get back everything that you
lost, but will you get back some of it? Yes, the brain will start to
devour more because it's been starved of REM sleep for so long. But
one of the bigger problems with THC that we worry about is withdrawal
dependency. So as you start to use THC for sleep, there can be a
dependency tolerance. So you start to need more to get the same sleep
benefit. And when you stop using, you usually get a very severe
rebound insomnia. And in fact, it's so potent that it's typically part
of the clinical withdrawal profile from THC from cannabis. -- And
there's anxiety withdrawal. I you know, I don't ask anybody to change
their behavior, we just as you said, we try and inform people about
what the science says and let them make choices for themselves. People
who are regular pot smokers, if you many of will insist they're not
addicted, and maybe indeed they don't actually follow the profile of
classical addiction, I don't know. I'm guessing some do, some don't.
But if you ask them well, what if I took away all marijuana
consumption for, I don't know, two weeks? That thought scares many of
them. And many of them will experience intense anxiety without
marijuana, which speaks to perhaps not addiction, but a certain kind
of dependency. And again, you know, I know many pot smokers, some of
whom have jobs that are quite high performing and they manage. --
Here in Berkeley, I don't know any of those. -- Yeah, none of those,
right. What about CBD? I mean, we hear so much about CBD, I've been a
little concerned about the fact that the analysis of a lot of CBD
supplements out there has confirmed that much like with melatonin, the
levels that are reported on the labels, in no way shape, or form,
match the levels that are actually contained in the various
supplements. Sometimes the levels are much higher than they're
reported on the labels. Other times, it's much lower. What does
ingesting CBD do to the architecture and quality of sleep? -- Right
now, I don't think we have enough data to make some kind of, you know,
meaningful sense out of it. I think the picture that is emerging,
however, is probably the following. Firstly, CBD does not seem to be
detrimental in the same ways that THC is. So we can start by saying
does it create you know, potential problems, not of the nature
necessarily that we see with THC. But the devil is a little bit in the
details from the data that we do have and it comes on to your valid
point of purity. At low dose, CBD can seem to be wake promoting. So in
lower doses, let see sort of five or 10 milligrams and trying to
remember some of the studies off the top of my head, there it actually
may enhance wakefulness and cause problems with sleep. It's only once
you get into the higher dose range, that there seem to have been some,
you know, increases sorry, increases in sleepiness, or sort of
sedation like, increases. And that's usually I think, above about 25
milligrams, as best I can recall from the data. And then when we look
in animal models, you typically see the same type of profile too. So
then the question becomes and now again, you just don't know about,
you know, purity. It's very difficult, although I think, and again,
I'm not a user, not necessarily because I you know, have anything
against it. It's just that's not, you know, necessarily my cup of tea.
There are some firms that are now doing third party independent
laboratory tests. I don't know how gamed that is, so I've got no sense
of it. -- I think some supplement companies are quite honest and
accurate about the amounts of various substances that are in their
products and some are not. And I think there's just a huge range. I
think the FDA is starting to explore CBD there I certainly I saw some
grant announcements to explore the function of CBD. Most of the work
on CBD is being done by the general public adjusting it and seeing how
they feel. I gave it to my dog who was had some dementia related sleep
disturbances, and it actually created a heightened wakefulness it
completely screwed up his sleep. -- Okay, it sounds as though it
just wasn't. -- He's a bulldog. So if he's going to get access to
sleep, he's going to take it. -- Okay. - Really messed him up, took
him took it away, he did better. But you know, that's a canine, so.
-- Right, and it could have been, you know, sort of dose related too.
-- Or binders or other things that are in there, sure. -- Correct,
yeah and we, but right now, if we were to, and I'm not making the
statement, I don't think anyone can make the statement now. But if it
ends up being that CBD is potentially beneficial for sleep, how can we
reconcile that mechanistically? And I think there are, to me, at
least, there are at least three candidate mechanisms that I've been
exploring and thinking about. The first is that it's thermo
regulatory. And what we found in some animal models is that CBD will
create a profile of hypothermia. In other words, it cools the body the
core body temperature down. And that's something that we know is good
for sleep. The second is that it's an anxyolitic, that it can reduce
anxiety. And that data is actually quite strong, even with some
functional imaging work that's been coming out recently showing that
one epicenter of emotion called the amygdala deep within the brain is
quietened down with CBD. So I think that's at least a second non
mutually exclusive. -- That's great, that's conducive. -- You
know, possibility. I think the third is some recent data that's come
out that was suggesting that CBD can alter the signaling of adenosine.
So it doesn't necessarily mean that you produce more adenosine, but
what it can do is perhaps modulate the sensitivity perhaps of the
brain, so that the weight of that same adenosine is weightier in its
brain signal, and therefore it creates this stronger pressure for
sleep. So I think these are all tentative mechanisms. I think any one
of them is viable, I think all three are viable together. But right
now I think, does that sort of help think through the tapestry of THC
and CBD? -- Yeah very much so and actually, it's a perfect segue
from we've talked about caffeine, alcohol, THC and CBD as sort of, we
framed them anyway, as things that done in moderation at the
appropriate times, are probably okay for most people. Certainly not
for everybody, there will be differences in sensitivity. But that done
at the incorrect times, and certainly in the incorrect amounts will
greatly disrupt this vital stage of life we call sleep. CBD, it seems,
represents a kind of bridge to the topic I'd like to talk about next,
which is things that promotes more healthy sleep, or somehow
contribute to enhancing the architecture and quality of sleep.
So I'd love to chat for a moment about the kind of grand, the original
I should say that not the granddaddy but the OG of sleep
supplementation, which is melatonin. The so called hormone of darkness
that's inhibited by light, etcetera. Frame for us, melatonin in the
context of its naturally occurring form. And then I'd like to talk
about melatonin the supplement because in my experience, anytime I say
the word melatonin, people think about the supplement melatonin, which
in itself is an interesting phenomenon that people are so cued to its
role as something you take, we often forget that this is something
that we make endogenously. I'd love for you to comment in particular
on even though without necessarily getting into its precise nanograms
per deciliter values, what are the typical amounts of melatonin that
we release each night? And then I'd like to compare that to what is
contained in say a three milligram or six milligram tablet that one
might buy at the pharmacy. -- Right, yeah. - So I go to sleep at
night, has melatonin already kicked in before I shut my eyes and lay
down my head? -- Usually, yes, if your system is working in the
correct way, as dusk is starting to happen, so let's say that you look
at hunter gatherer tribes who aren't touched by electricity, and so
that's sort of the puritanical state par excellence when it comes to
electric light influence. And usually, it's as dusk is approaching,
that's when melatonin will start to rise. And so when you lose the
brake pedal of light coming through the eyes, that normally acts like
a hard brake pedal that stamps down and prevents the release and
production of melatonin. As that light brake pedal starts to fade with
dusk, then we ease off the brake pedal and melatonin the spigot of
melatonin is opened up, and melatonin starts getting released. And
usually we'll see this rising peak of melatonin sometime, usually an
hour, two hours later or around and it varies from different people
around the time of sleep itself. But it's already been on the march
for some hours before you actually hit sleep itself. -- Interesting,
and I was always taught and I'm assuming it's still true that the only
source of melatonin in the brain and body is the pineal gland. Is that
still true? -- Yeah, it seems to be from best that we can tell the
pineal gland sort of meaning pea like sort of shape. It's actually I
think usually people say it's pea like, I think if you look at the
Latin derivative, it's more, I think it's derived from pine cone, not
pea because in fact, if you look at the pineal, it is more pine cone
shaped and so is aptly named. -- Any human brain I've ever dissected
or I confess I've dissected a lot 'cause I teach neuroanatomy and have
for years. I love looking at the pineal it's the one structure in the
brain that's not on both sides. It's usually pretty easy to find. And
it's a pretty good size. It looks like a, it looks like a pea. And
it's sitting right there. And it's remarkable that it releases this
hormone. Sort of probably our entire lifespan is inhibited by light.
So our pineal starts to release this into the general circulation. I
have to imagine we have melatonin receptors in the brain and body.
-- It's correct, so yep, essentially, your brain has a central Master
24 hour clock called the super charismatic nucleus that keeps internal
time. Now it's not a precise clock if left to its own devices, nothing
that a Swiss clock maker would be proud of. It runs a little bit long
and laggy. -- It's like an American clock. There are a couple of
good American watches by the way, Hamilton's are very nice, but. --
It's very much like a bug. -- We're not famous for our timekeeping
or our punctuality for that matter, but the Swiss are. -- It's very
it's not quite Swiss, like it's more Berkeley like, which is very
relaxed. Oh you know what whatever. So in most adults, the average
adult, I should say, your biological clock normally runs a little bit
long, it's about 24 hours and 30 minutes, I think was the last
calculation. But the reason that we don't keep drifting forward in
time and kind of running consistently, you know, more and later and
later, 30 minutes by 30 minutes by 30 minutes each day, is because
your central brain clock is regulated by external things such as
daylight and temperature, as well as food and activity. All of these
are essentially different fingers that come along and on the
wristwatch of the 24 hour clock will pull the dial out and reset it
each day to precisely 24 hours. And I make that point because it knows
24 hour time, but it needs to tell the rest of the brain and the body,
the 24 hour time as well. And one of the ways that it does this is by
communicating a chemical signal of 24 hour nurse of light and day
using this hormone, melatonin. And when it is at low levels, or it's
non existent, it's communicating the message it's daytime, and for us
diurnal species, it says it's time to be awake. Yet, at nighttime,
when dusk approaches and the break comes off melatonin and we start to
release it, then it signals to the rest of the brain and the body,
look, it's dusk and it's nighttime. And for us diurnal species, it's
time to think about sleep. So melatonin essentially tells the brain
and the body when it's day and when it's night, and with that when
it's time to sleep when it's time to wake. And therefore, that's why
melatonin helps with the timing of the onset of sleep. But it doesn't
really help with the generation of sleep itself. And this is why we'll
come on to what those studies of supplementation have taught us. --
So it tells the rest of my brain and body, it's time to go to sleep.
It perhaps even aids with the transition to sleep but it's not going
to for instance, ensure the overall structure of sleep or it's not the
conductor that's guiding the sleep orchestra so to speak throughout
the entire night. -- Yeah, it's. - It's more like the people that
essentially take you to your seat and sit you down and give you your
program. -- Right, exactly yeah, sort of the the fall, less
sophisticated analogy I have is, you know, melatonin is like the
starting official at the 100 meter race in the Olympics. -- That's a
better analogy, yeah. -- It calls all of the sleep racers to the
line and it begins the great sleep race. -- Yeah, better analogy by
the way. - [Matthew] It doesn't help dissipate, no, no, no, no. --
Coming from the sleep researcher of all people. -- But it doesn't
participate in the race itself. That's a whole different set of brain
chemicals and brain regions. Which then brings us on to perhaps the
question of supplementation, which is, is it helpful for my sleep?
Will I sleep longer? Will I sleep better? And if I am, what dosage
should I be taking? Sadly, the evidence in healthy adults who are not
older age suggests that melatonin is not really particularly helpful
as a sleep aid. I think there's a recent meta analysis that
demonstrated when it looked at all of the different sleep parameters,
melatonin, and a meta analysis for those not knowing what that is,
it's a scientific sort of method that we use where we gather all the
individual studies and we put them in a big bucket and we kind of do
this kind of statistical fancy sleight of hand. And we try to come up
with a big picture of what all of those individuals studies tell us.
And what that meta analysis told us is that melatonin will only
increase total amount of sleep by 3.9 minutes, on average. --
Minutes? - [Matthew] Minutes. -- Not even percent. -- And it will
only increase your sleep efficiency by 2.2%. So it really. -- This
is as they say, in certain parts of California, that's weak sauce,
that's a weak sauce effect. -- The sauce is not strong, the force is
not strong in this one, when it comes to a tool that in healthy people
who are not of older age, it doesn't seem to be especially beneficial.
Now, you know, results can vary. Everyone is different, of course. So
we're talking about the average, the so called average human adult
here. -- Well, melatonin, in defense of what you're saying and also
I should mention, I have a colleague at Stanford, Jamie Seitzer. --
Oh, wonderful, genius. -- Chuck Seitzer's lab at Harvard Med where
he also trained terrific sleep researcher and I asked him about
melatonin and he essentially said the same thing that you just said
which is very little if any evidence that it can improve sleep and yet
it's probably the most commonly consumed so called sleep aid. --
Hundreds of million dollars industry. -- Yeah, so either massive
placebo effect or it's operating through some other mechanism related
to quelling anxiety perhaps? -- Well, yeah, that's essentially
interesting, you know, there are some studies where you do see some,
you know, effects. Now, again, when you do the grand average of all
studies, it just doesn't seem to have an effect. But let's assume that
for some people, it does have an effect let's not again be sort of
completely dismissive of that, how could it have that effect? One of
the reasons that I've become a little bit more bullish on melatonin
from a sleep perspective and then melatonin more generally for a,
maybe you can speak about this too, as a counter measure when you're
undergoing insufficient sleep. There are two different routes there.
The first reason that I think it could have a sleep benefit for some
people is not because it helps in the generation of sleep, we know
that it doesn't, it's because it too seems to drop core body
temperature. -- There it is, temperature again. I'm fascinated these
days, more and more by temperature, as maybe not just a reflection of
brain state and wakefulness and in sleep, but actually a lever that is
quite powerful. -- I think it's both. -- And with all the interest
in ice baths and hot showers and saunas and stuff, something that we
will definitely touch on. Temperature variation is so key. So if
melatonin is dropping body temperature by a degree or so something
that you've said before can help induce a sleepy state. Maybe that's
what's allowing people to get in to sleep. -- I think that's one
possibility. I don't think melatonin by itself will drop it by it sort
of, you know, a degree, certainly not a degree Celsius. And for order
in us to fall asleep, and then stay asleep across the night, we do
need to drop our core body temperature by about one degree Celsius, or
about two to three degrees Fahrenheit. And that's why it's always
easier to fall asleep in a room that's too cold than too hot. I think
that that's one potential avenue that we are considering thinking more
deeply about when it comes to melatonin. And then the other is
melatonin as an antioxidant. But let me table that for now. 'Cause
I'll just get us sidetracked. That's what we know so far about
melatonin in terms of its supplementation benefit or lack thereof. Two
final points that I shouldn't forget, one is the only population where
we typically see some benefit, and it often is prescribed is in older
adults, because as we. -- Older meaning 60 and older? -- Yeah, 60,
65 and older because as we get older, you can typically have what's
called calcification of the pineal gland. Which means that that gland
that's releasing melatonin doesn't work as well anymore. As a
consequence, they tend to have a flatter overall curve of melatonin
release throughout the night. It's not this beautiful, lovely peak,
and this bullhorn message of its darkness, please get to sleep. That's
why older adults can have problems falling asleep or staying asleep.
It's not the only reason by any stretch of the imagination. But it's
one of the reasons and it's why melatonin supplementation in those
cohorts, older adults, and especially older adults with insomnia,
people have thought about that as maybe an appropriate use case. --
Well, along those lines, if we were to compare dosages, I don't, do we
know how much melatonin is typically released into the bloodstream per
night? And can we use that as a kind of a rule of thumb by which to
compare the typical amount that someone would supplement? Typically,
the supplements for melatonin that I see in the pharmacy and elsewhere
online range anywhere from one milligram to 12, or even 20 milligrams.
My guess is that a normal night's release of melatonin typical for
somebody in their 20s, 30s, 40s would be far lower than that, am I
correct or wrong? -- Yeah, it's many magnitudes lower. And this is
one of the problems is that I see that too. I see, you know, typical
doses are, you know, five milligrams or 10 milligrams and of course,
you know, if you're a supplement company, you know, putting 10
milligrams versus five milligrams, if that's what you're actually
doing, which we'll speak about purity as well. You know, it's kind of
like the super gulp size, nobody wants to lower price, they just want
you to you know, we'll just give you more for the same price. And
that's how we'll compete. So it's been this escalating arms race of
melatonin concentration, and it really does not look meaningful for,
you know, for sleep in any way. What we've actually found is that the
optimal doses for where you do get sleep benefits in the populations
that we've looked at, are somewhere between 0.1 and 0.3 milligrams of
melatonin. In other words, the typical doses are usually 10 times, 20
times maybe more than what your body would naturally expect. And this
is what we call a supra physiological dose. In other words, it's far
above what is physiologically normal? You know, and to put that in
context, imagine I said to you, I want you to eat 20 times as much
food today. -- I thought you're going to use testosterone as
example. You're going to take 300 times the normal amount of
testosterone we know that would have tons of deleterious effects it
would be terrible. And yet you can do this. One thing that I'm
concerned about about these super physiological levels of melatonin is
that many years ago, actually, here at Berkeley, when I was a graduate
student, we would inject animals which were seasonally breeding
animals with melatonin. And the consequence of that was that their
gonads, either their testes or ovaries would shrink, many hundred fold
or more. In other words, they would go from having nice healthy sized
hamster testicles, what a hamster would consider healthy size for a
hamster and they would shrink to the size of a grain of rice. So from
like an almonds to a grain size of a grain of rice. I had to see that
only once for me to be very concerned about super physiological levels
of melatonin. And I realized that melatonin does different things in
different species. We are not hamsters, we are not seasonal breeders
seasonally restricted breeders, there might be more breeding during
certain seasons, I don't know those data. But nonetheless, hormones
are powerful. And sure there is an optimal, and sometimes we see that
going slightly above endogenous levels for certain hormones not
always, can have beneficial effects. And sometimes it can have
detrimental effects. I'm just concerned about taking high levels of a
hormone that has effects on the reproductive axis and that's one of
the reasons why I get very concerned when I see people really getting
aggressive about melatonin supplementation taking 100, 10, 500,
sometimes even 10,000 times the amount that we would normally release.
That's my concern, although it's not nested in any one specific human
study. I just don't like to see, I certainly don't want to see other
people and I don't want to personally take a hormone that's known to
be androgen suppressive at high levels. Why would I take that? That's
the question I ask myself. -- I think it's a very, you know, good
point. And if you look at some of the evidence around, you know,
melatonins lethality if you want to go to that extreme, for the most
part, you know, it's pretty safe. -- You mean, you can take a lot of
it before you die? -- Right, exactly yeah. -- But I don't know
that that's the criteria. -- That should be your yardstick for,
because, you know, you really need to think about your, you know, your
health, not just whether this thing is going to kill you or not as the
decision matrix through which you pop a pill. And it comes on to this
concern around melatonin because there was a study, I think it's one
that you mentioned too where they looked at over, I think it was at
least over 20 different brands of melatonin supplements. And what they
found is that based on what it said, on the bottle versus what was in
the capsules themselves, it ranged from, I think it was 83% less than
what it said on the bottle to 478% more than what it said on the
bottle. Now, if that's a 10 milligram, you know, pill, and it's 478%
more than 10 milligrams, and we're already at 10 milligrams at many
tens of times more than is a physiological rather than a supra
physiological dose, we do need to be a bit thoughtful. -- Yeah,
remember those hamsters folks. Well, and I do appreciate the deep dive
on melatonin because I think people need to understand that it's
nuanced, it's a matter of dosages, and timing, etcetera. And then it
may have its place as you mentioned in older individuals. And I should
mention that I'm an avid consumer of supplements that I believe in for
me and I have been for a very long time. So I'm by no means anti
supplement. Some supplements I refuse to take or avoid taking others I
quite avidly take and along those lines, I personally and I don't know
what your thoughts on this are.
But there are a few things that I've personally found beneficial. I
love your thoughts on them. And I would love it if you would tell me
that everything I'm about to refer to is placebo, that would be fine.
So that's what we do, we're scientists we argue and then we remain
friends in as it goes away. So magnesium, there are many forms of
magnesium. Magnesium citrate is a as we know, is a terrific laxative.
Magnesium malate seems, at least from a few studies seems to relieve
some of delayed onset muscle soreness doesn't seem to create a kind of
sedation. Two forms of magnesium that I'm aware of magnesium
biglycinate and magnesium threonate. We believe based on the data can
more actively cross the blood brain barrier. So you put in your gut,
but some of that needs to go into your brain in order to have the
sedative effect. What are your thoughts on magnesium supplementation?
Do you supplement with magnesium? And what studies would you like to
see done if they haven't been done already. -- So I don't supplement
with magnesium. But I do think threonate is interesting because of
that higher capacity to cross the blood brain barrier and actually
have a central nervous system effect. And the reason that that
interests me is because the sleep is by the brain of the brain, and
also for the brain, as well as for the body. We just don't have a
particularly good set of studies that have targeted exclusively
threonate. We do have lots of studies that have just looked at
magnesium in general for sleep. And overall, the data is uncompelling.
-- Interesting. - And for a while, I was confused as to why, where did
this come from this kind of myth of magnesium? So I started looking
back into the literature and I've best traced it at least as far as I
can tell, to early studies showing that those who are deficient in
magnesium also had sleep problems. They had other problems too, of
course, but sleep problems were one of that set of sequelae that came
from having lower magnesium. And when they supplemented with magnesium
and tried to restore those levels, some of those sleep problems
dissipated. And then that seems to have gotten lost in sort of some
game of sort of like whispers around the room and it's become
translated into people who don't have sleep problems, who are healthy
sleepers, and who are healthy in general, and who have healthy normal
levels of magnesium, if they take more magnesium, they will sleep
better. And the data really, there is not good. Once again, the only
study that I've seen where magnesium did have some efficacy was in a
study with older adults, I think they were 60 to 80 years old, it may
have been exclusively women, now I think about it and they also had
insomnia. And in that population, you did see some benefits. And my
guess is that because it's an older community as well, they were
probably deficient in magnesium. So they fit the former category of
simply when you're deficient, and you restore, you can help sleep sort
of return to normal. But if you are not deficient and you're healthy,
and you're not old and you don't have insomnia, and you're
supplementing thinking that it provides sleep, right now, the data
isn't supportive of that. But I just don't think we have enough
threonate data to actually speak about that, because it could just be
a blood brain barrier issue so far with the other forms. -- So maybe
some additional studies looking specifically at threonate or bi-
glycinate would be useful. - I'd love to have. -- Magnesium is
involved in so many cellular processes, you can imagine that this
effect, if it truly exists is, as we say, in science in the noise,
meaning it's in the jitter of the data, but to isolate the real effect
one needs to do some more refined studies. What are some things that
are of interest to you, if not things that you happen to take?
These are not things that I personally take mostly because I just
haven't experimented with them. valerian root is one, tart cherry and
kiwi fruit. Tell me about Valerian root, tart cherry and kiwi fruit.
This is new to me. I have certainly heard of them. And tart cherry and
Kiwi sounds delicious, but what's happening with Valerian root tart
cherry and kiwi and are we talking about eating tart cherries and
Kiwis and Valerian roots? - Yes. -- Or are talking about taking them
in pill form? -- Usually it's supplements, but it's also both for
tart cherries and for kiwis. It's the actual, you know, fruit
themselves. Valerian often touted as a beneficial sleep aid and lots
of people swear by it too. But the evidence is actually quite against
that. -- Oh really? - Not that it makes your sleep worse, but of at
least the seven good studies that I've been able to find, and
typically these are of the nature of what we call a randomized placebo
crossover design. And I won't bore people with what that means it's
sort of one of the. -- Good studies, solid studies. -- Yeah, it's
one of the sort of gold standard methods that we have when we're
looking at intervention studies such as drugs studies. Five of the
seven found no benefits of Valerian root on sleep. Then two out of the
seven, the data was just insufficient. I think it was a power issue
where they just couldn't make any strong conclusions. And then I think
there was the most recent study, I think looked at two different doses
of Valerian and I could have this wrong and they just failed to find
any effects once again, but the stunning part of that paper, as I
recall, they had this big table with all of the different sleep
metrics that they looked at. And there were well over 25 different
things that they tried to see if valerian impacted. And none of them
were significant. Which stuns me because from statistical
probabilities, we know, if you just randomly perform 25 statistical
tests, chances are probabilistically, you'll just get one significant
result by random chance. And even with random chance on their side,
they still couldn't find a benefit of Valerian, so. -- So Valerian
root might be worse than nothing at all, if there is, so to speak.
-- I mean, again, placebo effect we can think about that too. And I
would say that if you feel as though it's having a benefit for you,
and with all of the caveats that we have with supplements, things like
melatonin purity, concentration, et cetera, you know, maybe it's no
harm no foul. But I'm not a you know, a medical doctor and I don't
tell anyone about we have all of these disclaimers about not
recommending such things. -- And we'll include these, I mean, I
always say, you know, we're not physicians, we don't prescribe
anything. We're scientists and professors so we profess things. It's
up to people to be responsible for their own health. Not just to
protect us but to protect themselves. I do want to hear about tart
cherry and kiwi fruit. What's the story there? -- Strange, isn't it?
I was, you know, I'm kind of a hard nosed scientist, and when people
you know, some years ago started saying, oh, tart cherries, it's the
thing or kiwi fruits, I was thinking, oh, my goodness, the sounds a
bit. -- You've been in California a little too long. -- Yeah, I
know, yeah, the sun is softened me some. But I thought, look one of
the things that we have to do as scientists is be as open minded as
possible. And I should not be so quick to dismiss. So I went to the
literature just started reading as much as I could about it. And there
were three really good randomized placebo crossover trials with tart
cherries. And what they found was that in one study, it reduced the
amount of time that you spent awake at night by over an hour. And then
the other two studies, one of them found that it increased the amount
of sleep that you've got by 34 minutes. The other it increased the
amount of sleep that you got by 84 minutes. Which you know, these are,
and what's striking is that they were independent studies, I think,
meaning that they were from independent groups, and these were, you
know, some of these guys, you know, and girl, I know pretty well, and
they are really. -- You know and trust their work. -- Right, I
really trust their work too. -- Were they ingesting actual tart
cherries or they're drinking the juice or in capsule form? -- It was
juice. So they in all three studies, it was juice. Although you can I
think as a supplement, you can buy it in a capsule, and we've got no
idea whether that changes the benefit or not. What was also
interesting in I think it was that last study where they got an
increase in sleep by 84 minutes, it also decreased a daytime napping
significantly. -- That's one that I could certainly make use of. I
love my day time naps, but I'd love to skip them too. -- Right and
we can speak about naps and sort of the upside and downside of that.
Which then made me think well, if that's the case, may be the net net
benefit on sleep overall, is no different. It's just that it decreases
the amount of time that some people were taking to sleep during the
day, and giving it back to the night. But that wasn't the case, 'cause
if you added the total amount of sleep that they were getting without
tart cherries, both naps and nightly sleep combined, still, when you
took tart cherries, you still got a net some benefit, of total amount
of sleep. So you know, so far, when it comes to supplements, and those
types of studies, they're good studies, and the data looks
interesting. But as a drug itself, you know, if this was clinical
drug, you know, three studies that are somewhat small in nature and
have some positive benefit that's what we would call preliminary data
of maybe a chin scratching kind so keep this in context. -- Yeah,
and depending on the margins for safety, one might think, well, given
that it's a tart cherry as opposed to some pharmaceutical you need a
prescription for then, you know, some people their threshold to
experiment with supplements is quite low, some people their threshold
is quite high. I feel like you know, there are two categories, or at
least two categories of folks out there. People who hear oh, tart
cherry can improve sleep, and we'll run out and try it. And people who
hear well, that sounds crazy. Why would I do that? But of course, we
have to remind people that tart cherry isn't really what we're talking
about, presumably if this is a real effect, and sounds like it might
be that there's a compound in tart cherries. -- That's right. - That
if we were to call it, whatever, whatever five alpha six, you know,
some molecule, if we refer to it by its technical name, then people
would say, oh, that sounds like a very interesting technical way to
approaches sleep but doesn't sound very natural. So both groups are a
little bit misguided in the sense that people who think that
everything that comes from naturally occurring foods, plants,
etcetera, things that grow out of the ground, that that's all safe,
that's not true. And people that think that pharmaceuticals are the if
it's not evidence with the purified molecule, then something's not of
utility. Well, that's certainly not true. somewhere in the middle, I
think lies the answer, which is, it sounds to me like tart cherry is
at least an intriguing potential sleep aid. Intriguing potential sleep
aid and underscoring potential. I'm certainly intrigued by it to the
point where I might experiment a bit, but I'm an experimenter for
myself. Before I ask you about kiwi, I've had quite good results from
taking something called apigenin, which is a derivative of chamomile.
But in supplement form, I think I take 50 milligrams about 30 minutes
before sleep. And I subjectively experience a better night's sleep, so
to speak. I don't measure I confess, I don't measure my sleep. I'm not
a sleep tracker guy. But, you know, there are a few papers out there
they're not what we would call blue published in Blue Ribbon journals,
but they have control groups, and it looks somewhat interesting. And
there when I say apigenin people get somewhat intrigued oh this
molecule. Chamomile has long been thought to be a sedative, a mild
sedative, but a sedative? Do you drink chamomile tea? Do you take
apigenin? What are your thoughts on apigenin? -- Yeah, I don't. And
I have looked into some of the data regarding sleep as well. Right now
from best I can tell it's mostly subjective data rather than objective
hard sort of sleep measures. And that's why right now I you know, it's
sort of unclear not no comment, but just unclear, not dismissing it,
because I think you and I both ascribe to the idea of absence of
evidence is not evidence of absence. So keep your mind open, at least
I tell that to myself. I think if you're finding a benefit, and you
can do what I would think of if I was personally experimenting, which
is both the positive and negative parts of the experiment, what I mean
by that is, you know, let's say that I now want to, you know, think
about some kind of sleep supplement, I will take some kind of baseline
set of recordings for a month, and I will just gauge where I'm at,
sort of supplement free. Then I'll go on for a month or two, whatever
I'm thinking of taking, and I don't, you know, supplement. But let's
say that I want to and I experiment with that. And I feel as though
based on my metrics be them objective from my aura ring or be them
subjective from whatever I'm, you know, writing down in the morning,
and both are important and valid, subjective and objective, we like
both in the sleep world. And I think, okay, look, it's clearly that it
seems to have some kind of an effect. The key thing, however, is then
do the negative experiment, which is now come off it for another
month, and see, do things get worse. And if I can see that by
directionality, then I'm starting to think maybe I'm believing this a
little bit more. So that's the way I would sort of typically approach
you know, a supplementation regiment if I were to do it. And that's
just me, that's just the way my mind works, but. -- No, that's
great. I think it's very scientific and organized in a way that allows
you and would allow other people to make very informed decisions for
themselves. I like that. I like to think in terms of manipulating any
aspect of our biology, that behavioral tools always are the first line
of entry, then nutrition, everyone has to eat sooner or later, even if
you're fasting, then perhaps supplementation, then prescription drugs,
and then perhaps brain machine interface, devices that you use to
induce something. And those can be done in combination. But what
concerns me is when I hear people say, well, what should I take
without thinking about their behavior, their light viewing behavior,
etcetera. But of course, these things work in combination. -- And I
think it's, you're right, that there's many when it comes to sleep,
there are many low hanging fruits that don't necessarily require you
to, you know, put sort of exogenous molecules in other words things
like supplements into your body or, you know, use different types of
drugs to help you get there. Now, when it comes to prescription sleep
aids, I think I've been again a little bit too forthright. We know in
clinical practice that there may be a time and a place for things like
sleeping pills, they are a short term solution to certain forms of
insomnia, but they are not recommended for the long term. And we also
know that there are lots of other ways that you can get a sleep help
or you can get a sleep curative profile from things like cognitive
behavioral therapy for insomnia, which is a non drug approach,
psychological. -- And quite effective from what I understand, good
data. -- Just as effective as sleeping pills, great data more
effective in the long term. There's a recent study published that
after working with a therapist, some of the benefits lasted almost a
decade, you know, now, if you stop sleeping pills, usually you have
rebound insomnia, where your sleep goes back to being just as bad if
not worse. And I think the same is true, when we think about
supplementation, there are so many things that are easy to implement
when it comes to sleep, that don't require venturing out into those
waters. And again, we're not here to tell anyone about whether they
should venture or not, that's completely your choice. All I'm saying
is that if you want to think about optimizing your sleep, there are a
number of ways that you can do it that don't necessarily require you
to swallow anything or inject anything or you know, smoking or
anything, or free base. -- And of which the margins of safety are
quite quite wide. That's the other one. -- Yes, right thank you. So
speaking of low hanging fruit, I don't know how it hangs in reality,
but what about kiwi? They're delicious to me anyway. -- Yeah, the
humble kiwi fruit named not shouldn't be mistaken for the flightless
bird of New Zealand, which is the native bird there. We're talking
about the kiwi the fruit here, which those trees and shrubs are mostly
South East Asia. Kiwi fruits have been previously touted as
potentially having a sleep benefit, which again got me curious and I
at first threw it out. To my knowledge, there's really only one
published human study that's of any value. But what they did find was
that it decreased the speed of time with which it took you to fall
asleep. -- These are you ingesting the whole kiwi. So it's ingesting
the whole kiwi. -- With the skin, I eat the skin, people cringe when
they see me, or don't eat the skin? -- Well, I think, no, no, no, I
think the idea is some of the good stuff and I'll come on to this may
actually be in the skin itself. -- Oh wonderful, thank you. You just
helped me win a bet. I'll give you your cut. -- Okay, okay, yeah,
you can pay me later. By the way this skin is use? No, no, no. He just
told me to say that's how he wins, no, he did not. So the skin seems
to be part of this potential sleep equation. And that study, you fell
asleep faster and you stayed asleep for longer and you spent less time
awake throughout the night. And I just thought, well, you know, that's
one study, what can you really do with that? There was another study,
however, in an animal model, which is, you know, a little bit more
interesting. And once again, they found a very similar phenotype that
the rats, sorry they were mice, the mice fell asleep faster. And they
also spent longer time in sleep. The sleep duration also increased.
What was also interesting mechanistically and this is not the
mechanism that I think ties together tart cherries, kiwi fruit, and
you know things like melatonin, because I think there could be one
common binding mechanism. What they found in the animal study is that
they could block those kiwifruit sleep benefits using a GABA blocking
agent. Now GABA which stands for Gamma Amino Butyric Acid is one of
the major inhibitory neurotransmitters of the brain. It's kind of like
the red. -- So a naturally occurring sedative, sort of? -- Yeah,
it's the kind of the red light on the traffic light signal, you know,
others are green light. GABA is red light. So by playing around with
some sort of clever drugs to manipulate the system, they could prevent
the benefit of the kiwi fruit by sort of buggering around with the
GABA receptor, meaning that perhaps part of the kiwi fruit benefit on
sleep was mediated by the brain's natural inhibitory neurotransmitter
system called the GABA system. -- That's exciting. - And I thought
that that was kind of, that convinced me a little bit more that maybe
there's something here to read into. So to be determined, again, here
is the banner, but you know, tart cherries and kiwi fruits the data
surprised me, because in part I was so preoccupied with being you
know, I don't know a bit pure-ish about and a bit snobby thinking come
on, that's definitely not going to work, well the data certainly found
out. [cross talking] -- I look forward to a day when supplements are
no longer called supplements, because at the end of the day, whether
or not something has an effect, whether or not it's a whole kiwi fruit
or a derivative of kiwi fruit will depend on the molecular compound.
And as you mentioned, this potential mechanism via the GABA system, we
both as scientists get excited about mechanism 'cause when you can
trace a mechanism and a pathway it provides a rationale a grounding
for why kiwi of all things or tart cherry of all things might help
increase total sleep time. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention or ask
about tryptophan and serotonin.
I can anecdotally say, when I've taken tryptophan, the precursor to
serotonin, or serotonin itself, I have a horrendous night's sleep. I
fall asleep very easily. And I experience ridiculously vivid dreams.
Neither pleasant nor unpleasant is kind of a mishmash. And then I wake
up and I experience several days of insomnia. That and I've done the
positive control and the negative control and all the variations there
of to confirm that, at least for me supplementing with serotonergic
agents is a bad idea for me. And tryptophan is a common sleep
supplement and sleep aid that's discussed. The normal architecture of
sleep involves the release of serotonin, but in a very timed and
regulated way. What are your thoughts about serotonin in sleep? If you
had to kind of put that into a nutshell. And then why supplementing
with serotonin and or its precursor, tryptophan might be a good or a
bad idea for somebody. -- I think one of the potential dangers is
that based on what's going on in your body, that can change the
absorption of natural sort of tryptophan and serotonin uptake within
the brain itself. So I'm always thoughtful when you're playing around
with that mother nature dynamic as it were. The data as you described
is a little bit all over the map. Some people say that it knocks them
out other people say just like you do, it has a terrible impact on my
sleep. And when I stop, it's pretty bad for a couple of days, it seems
to have this lingering after effect. I think what could be happening
here is we need serotonin to just as you described, to be modulated in
very specific ways during the different stages of sleep. If you look
at the firing of the brain epicenters where serotonin is released, and
there's a bunch of them in the brainstem, what you find, and the
release of serotonin too, when we're awake, it's usually in high
concentrations, as we start to drift off to sleep, it lowers some, but
not necessarily dramatically as we're going into non REM sleep. But
then when we go into REM sleep serotonin is shut off. The other, one
of the other neuromodulators noradrenalin also shut off. REM sleep is
the only time during the 24 hour period, where we see noradrenaline
and serotonin or norepinephrine, completely shut down. When I say
serotonin, we're also talking 5-HTP, sorry, 5-HT, that's just its
chemical name here. So whether it was speaking about serotonin or 5-HT
is the same thing. Norepinephrine, noradrenaline, both of those need
to be shut down for you to produce REM sleep. The other, one of the
other neuromodulators, that then ramps up to produce REM sleep is
acetylcholine. So these three neuromodulators have this incredible
reciprocal dance that they have for you to generate what is called a
natural architecture of sleep throughout the night. -- It's the push
pull again. -- It's a push pull again, you know, it's you know, it's
just and back. It's, you know, whatever you want to think of. That's
why I think if you're trying to increase dramatically drive up your
serotonin levels at night, and that sustains throughout the night,
when you're trying to get into REM sleep, you could be artificially
fragmenting REM sleep. Now, I don't know the data, I don't think
anyone's really got the data. -- No, I haven been able to find it.
-- But that's why I would be, you know if you were to say, Matt, two
years time, that's the data helped me understand the potential
mechanism or let's design some experiments, where would you go first?
I would say let's look at the disruption of REM sleep, non REM sleep,
reciprocal regulation, because, you know, you need serotonin to be,
you know, up at one time down at another, so. -- I agree with
everything you said. And I'm personally never taking tryptophan or
serotonin again, unless there's some clinical reason for that that I
would need to do that. I want to ask about some other pro sleep
behaviors.
But before I do that, let's talk about naps. I love naps. I come from
a long history of nappers. My dad always took a nap in the afternoon,
I take a 20 or 30 minute nap or I do a practice which I took the
liberty of coining NSDR, non sleep deep rest, some sort of just
passive laying out their feet up elevated. Sometimes people do you or
I'll do yoga Nidra, I'll do hypnosis or something of that sort, but 20
or 30 minutes of that has been very beneficial for me to get up from
that nap or period of minimal wakefulness, we'll call it and go about
my day quite well, and also fall asleep just fine. What are the data
on naps? Do you nap? And what are your thoughts about keeping naps
short meaning 20 to 30 minutes versus getting out past 90 minutes, two
hours? So for you personally naps, yay, nay or meh? -- I don't nap.
And I've just never been a habitual napper. -- Is that because you
don't feel sleepy in the afternoon, or because? -- I typically don't
feel sleepy? -- So you're just hardier then. -- I am, I wouldn't
say hardier, I may be less capable of falling asleep, my sleep drive.
-- But you're not dragging through the afternoon? -- No, no, I don't
drag through out the. -- So you don't nap because you don't feel a
need to nap? -- That's right, yep. Now, it's not that I am immune to
what we call the postprandial dip in alertness. I definitely feel as
though there can be this kind of afternoon lull, where, you know, I'm
not quite as on as I was at 11 o'clock in the morning. And we know the
physiology to that, which brings us back to whether we were designed
to nap. So for naps, we've done lots of different studies and other
colleagues have done these studies too. Naps can have some really
great benefits, we found benefits for cardiovascular health, blood
pressure, for example, we found benefits for levels of cortisol, we
found benefits for learning and memory, and also emotional regulation.
-- How long are the naps, typically, in those studies? -- Anywhere
between 20 minutes to 90 minutes. Sometimes we like to use a 90 minute
window so that the participant can have a full cycle of sleep, and
therefore they get both non REM and REM sleep within that time period.
Then when we wake them up, we usually wait a period of time to get
them past what we call sleep inertia, which is that kind of window of
grogginess where you say to you, better half look, you know, darling,
please don't speak to me for the first hour after I've. -- Don't
anything right now. -- After the first hour of waking up, you know,
I'm not just, I'm just not the best version of myself. So we wait for
that time period, and then we do some testing. And we've done some
testing before and after, and we look at the change. And that's how we
measure what was the benefit of naps and the reason why we sometimes
do 90 minutes so that they get all of those stages of sleep. And then
we correlate, how much benefit did you get from the nap, and how much
of that benefit was explained by what REM sleep you got, what deep
sleep you got, what light sleep you got? So that's the only reason
that we use that as an experimental tool. What we've also found is
that naps of as little as 17 minutes can have some quite potent
effects on for example, learning. None of this is novel, NASA
pioneered this back in the 1990s. And during the missions, they were
experimenting with naps for their astronauts. And what they found was
that naps of little as 26 minutes, improved mission performance by
34%, and improved daytime alertness by 50%. And it birthed what was
then called the NASA nap culture throughout all terrestrial NASA staff
during that time period. So it's long been known that naps can have a
benefit. Naps, however, can have a double edged sword there is a dark
side to naps. And it comes back to our story of adenosine and sleep
pressure. The longer we're awake, the more of that sleep pressure
adenosine that we build up. But what I didn't tell you is that when we
sleep, the brain gets the chance to essentially clear out that
adenosine. And after about 16 hours of wakefulness, and then after
about eight hours of sleep, eight hours of sleep seems to be able to
allow the brain to decrease its adenosine levels back to normal. And
so naturally, we should start to wake up which also aligns with your
circadian rhythm. And those are two separate processes. But with about
eight hours of good quality sleep seven to nine hours for the average
adult, we are free of all of that adenosine. We've evacuated it
essentially out of the brain, and we wake up naturally feeling
refreshed. The reason that naps can be potentially dangerous is that
when you nap, you are essentially opening the valve on the pressure
cooker of sleep pressure. And some of that sleepiness is lost by way
of the nap. So for some people and not all people and you're a great
example of this. Some people, however, if they are struggling with
sleep at night, and they nap during the day, it makes their sleep
problems even worse. So for people with insomnia, we typically advise
against napping. And the advice is if you can nap regularly, and you
don't struggle with sleep at night, then naps are just fine. But if
you do struggle with sleep, stay away from naps. If you are going to
nap, try to limit your naps, try to cut them off a bit like sort of
caffeine, maybe you know, eight to 12 hours maybe not that you know
far off maybe sort of seven to six hours is a good rule of thumb. Try
not to nap essentially late in the afternoon. And if you do take a nap
and you want to maintain your you don't want to have that grogginess
hangover that can happen after a full night of sleep for the first
hour, try to limit it to about 20, 25 minutes. And that way you don't
go down into the very deepest stages of sleep, which if I wrench you
out of with an alarm, then you just kind of feel you almost feel
worse, for the first hour after the nap. -- I've definitely
experienced that if I oversleep. Certainly if the sun goes down during
my nap and I wake up and light overall lighting conditions have
changed, I find it very hard to jolt myself back into the evening. And
it can screw me up. So I try and keep those naps pretty brief. And I
should say, I'm very happy to hear you mention individual differences
and why some people might want to nap and other people might not want
to nap, I have a colleague Liqun Luo he'll be familiar to many
neurobiologist. -- Yeah of course. -- Who's a absolutely
spectacular scientist, member of the National Academy, Howard Hughes
investigator just a phenom, and has a ton of energy. But years ago, I
learned that he always takes a nap in the afternoon, so much so that
when he travels to give seminars at other universities, he will tell
his post lunch host whoever it is that he's supposed to meet with, may
I have your office for 30 minutes of our, sometimes 30 minute
discussion or 60 minute discussion, because I like to take a nap. And
he does that and then gives us his, his talks are typically in the
afternoon in academic culture. And he describes the effect of the nap
for him this short naps in the afternoon being so profound for his
productivity. That's actually what inspired me to start feeling okay
about my desire to nap. And so I think for me, that was great
vindication for those that might feel guilty about wanting a nap. But
I take to heart your note about avoiding naps if you have trouble
falling and staying asleep, 'cause I think that I have family members
who also if they nap, they're a wreck, they can't sleep. -- Yeah, I
think it's just, we've often been very pro sleep with sort of the
sleep community. So I think it's good to always point out these
potential dark sides of any aspect. But you're absolutely right, no
one should feel guilty about getting the sleep that they need. And I
think that's been one of the big problems in society society has
stigmatized sleep with these labels of being slothful or lazy. And
we're almost embarrassed, you know, to tell colleagues that we take a
nap. I think sleep is a write of human beings. And I therefore think
that sleep is a civil right of all human beings. And no one should
make you feel unproud of getting the sleep that you need. -- No, I
love that. And I it's an important point. I also feel that one of the
best ways to beat your competition in any endeavor is to outlive them.
So now that we know that sleep can enhance longevity and lack of sleep
can shorten one's life, that's all the justification I need anyway.
Can somebody sleep too much? Is it possible to get too much sleep?
-- It's a very good question. And there are probably two things to
say about it, there is a condition that we call hypersomnia. But
that's a mixture of things, it's where people have either a very high
sleep need, or they are very sleepy during the day. And they're
typically falling asleep. And these can happen in a variety of
different clinical contexts. One of the places where we've often seen
hypersomnia believed to manifest is in depression. But if you look at
some of those studies, it turns out, it looks more as though those
people are simply reporting being in bed longer, but not necessarily
sleeping longer. And that fits very well with one of the profiles that
we know of depression, which is anhedonia, you don't get pleasure from
normally pleasurable things. So you just don't want to go out into the
world, you don't want to interact because you're depressed. So what do
you do? You just stay in bed? -- Blinds closed, watching TV, on the
phone. - [Matthew] Right, and that just looks as though you know, --
Felling miserable. - When people say, what time did you go to bed? And
what time did you get out of bed? The mistake made in that question is
okay, that's how much time their sleeping when you should have said,
what time did you fall asleep? And what time did you wake up? And the
answer could be very different. So that's hypersomnia from a clinical
context. Can you sleep too much though? One of the data points that
argues yes, that's possible is when we look at all cause mortality.
Certainly what you find is that using the sweet spot of seven to nine
hours, when you start to draw below seven hours, there is a
relationship, which suggests that the shorter your sleep, the shorter
your life. Short sleep in that regard predicts all cause mortality.
But it's again, not a linear relationship like the one that we've seen
with REM sleep. Once you get past nine hours, the mortality curve
stops going down. And then once you get further 10 or 11 hours, it
hooks back up again, it's almost like a J shape, tilted over a little
bit and reversed. So there's this strange hook, what's going on here?
Right now, sleep science has at least two non mutually exclusive
explanations for this. The first is that if you look at some of those
populations, the idea is that the whatever was causing them illness
and took their lives was just too much for sleep to deal with.
However, we know that when we get sick, one of the things that we do
immediately in this whole mechanism and inflammatory mechanisms
cytokine mediated, when we get sick, we want to sleep more. We just
want to curl up in bed and you know, sleep it off. So the argument
there is that it's not that sleep was killing people prematurely, it
was that these people were calling on this the help of sleep, they
were calling on this thing called the Swiss Army Knife of health, that
is sleep. But whatever it is that they were facing was just too
powerful for sleep to overcome. So it artificially looks as though
more sleep leads to a higher risk of death, when sleep is actually
responding to the mortality risk, and it lost the battle. That's one
argument. The second is that we know that sleep quality and poor sleep
efficiency is a very strong predictor of all cause mortality. And when
you look at people who often report sleeping longer amounts, 10 or 11
hours, they typically report having very poor quality sleep. So
because their quality of sleep is poor, they just try to sleep longer
to try and get some of that back. So again, here now it's poor quality
sleep masking as too much sleep leading to this artificial hook which
looks like mortality. That's the second explanation. A third which is
more of a Gedanken, which is just the kind of like a thought
experiment and I have this mentality, I don't know how many other
people share this. I actually think that could be a thing as too much
sleep. Physiologically, I think it's possible. But the reason I think
that is because it's no different than food, water or oxygen. Can you
overeat? Yes, you can. Can you under eat? Of course. - Or light. light
in the early part of the day, throughout the day, wonderful. Light
late in the day and at night, detrimental. -- Bi-directional, you
know, for water, can you over hydrate, hypernatremia it can lead, you
know, it happened in the 1990s and 2000, with the ecstasy craze, where
governments were saying you're dehydrating you're dancing all night,
please drink water. And they drunk too much water, their blood
electrolytes went you know, all over the place, and they were having
cardiac arrests or stroke. -- Yeah people were dying. -- And they
were dying because of excessive hydration. Can you get too much
oxygen, hypoxemia? And it can cause free radical damage, which can be
profoundly harmful and kill brain cells. Can you sleep too much? You
know, which is the fifth element of the life equation, you know,
alongside you know, food, water, oxygen, you know, so forth. I should
say I can't even count. Clearly I'm sleeping well. Yes, I think that
could be that possibility. Are most people in danger of getting too
much sleep? Or contrary, if you look at the data. So but I don't
dismiss that idea. I think it's possible. -- That's a very thorough
and very nuanced, and yet very clear answer. So I, it's so interesting
to think that a lot of the data that's out there that talking about
being in bed too long that it's just trying to compensate for the
actual fragmentation of sleep. So what I'm coming away with is that
there are many paths to this and both positive and things to avoid.
But the idea is to get most nights, a similar amount, probably seven
to nine hours, somewhere in there, of high quality sleep. That this
notion of sleep quality is going to become, I would hope, a phrase
that more people think about and learn about and cultivate as a
practice. I want to ask about a set of behaviors that I'm at least I'm
aware of at least one company is starting to track in their sleep
monitoring device, and that's orgasm, and sex orgasm and masturbation
topics that are, you know, are somewhat sensitive.
But from the perspective of biology, right, none of us would be here
were it not for sperm meets egg in some fashion, either in a dish or
in vivo. But what are the data as you know them to be or maybe your
lab is even doing this kind of work and exploration about the role
that sex, orgasm, masturbation play in getting to sleep and staying
asleep and sleep quality? Certainly those behaviors and those
physiological events have been part of our evolutionary history.
What's the story there? What can we say about this in terms of science
and dare I say practice? -- Yeah, I mean, it's almost that
caricature of you know, in the movies where, you know, a couple makes
love and then all of a sudden, you just sort of hear snoring or, you
know, that happens with the idea that it somewhat some neurogenic that
it's sleep promoting. -- Well, the post orgasmic increase in
prolactin. -- Well, that's very, is interesting. -- Is thought to
be a set a naturally occurring sedative, that presumably has a
function in. -- And oxytocin has that also that benefit where you
see, you know, a dissipation of the fight or flight branch of the
nervous system, which has to happen for you to fall asleep. That's why
we often see, you know, here at The Sleep Center, we'll see a
phenomenon called wired and tired where people say, look, I am so
desperately tired I just I'm so so tired, but I can't fall asleep,
because I'm too wired. So your sleep drive, you're desperately tired,
it's there but because you're wired, because you've got too much
sympathetic activation, too much cortisol as well, you can't fall
asleep. It's an impressive roadblock to anything like good sleep. And
it's one of the principal mechanisms that we now believe stress and
physiological activation, that is the underlying cause of many forms
of insomnia. But coming back to sex, the data is actually quite
compelling, that both either subjectively assessed sleep quality, or
objective amount of sleep, sex that has resulted in orgasm, and I
think it's that latter part that typically needs to happen. -- I
would imagine so. -- That, you know, so between two mutually
exclusive individuals, where both are, you know, beneficial in terms
of receiving an orgasm. [cross talking] -- Yeah, I would say any
discussion about sex, we were referring to consensual, age
appropriate, species appropriate, context appropriate. -- Wow, I
would never have even gone to the species appropriate. -- I put
species in there because it's the internet, and people will come up
with all sorts of ideas. So I think that age appropriate, I think age
appropriate, consensual, context appropriate and species appropriate,
covers all the bases, but if I missed any, put them in the comment
section, and we'll be sure to take note. -- Yeah, no, I think that's
really well said and important to say. So the data that is the when
you look at couples who have orgasm. We've also, however, found
benefits of masturbation, and it's not frequently spoken about. But
what if you do some surveys, it turns out that people will often use
masturbation as a sleep tool, if they're struggling with sleep. And I
know, this sort of sounds almost like a strange conversation, or it's
a taboo conversation but I think we just need to be very open about
all of this. -- I started off in science, one of the things I worked
on early in my career, not the very first topic was the topic of early
influences of hormones, estrogen and testosterone on sexual
development of the brain and body. And when you are weaned in a
laboratory like that, regardless of what era, you look at sex and its
behaviors, and its hormones, and its physiologies as a scientist, and
so that's to be clear what we're doing here, we're exploring these
behaviors from that perspective. I mean, one thing is for certain,
everyone is here because a sperm met an egg, either in a dish or in
vivo, as we said before, and at least in 2021, there's no way around
that fact. And what preceded that is typically this act we call sex
and sometimes, hopefully, I like to think orgasm is associated with
that sexual activity. Masturbation is one dimension of that is
something that I think it can and should be discussed, if in fact,
there are data that relate it to sleep. -- Yeah, and both of those
routes seem to lead to a sleep benefit. Now, I'm not saying that it's
all about the orgasm. I think as we spoke about with oxytocin, there
is some degree of par bonding that if you have a partner, and you
experience you know, an intimate loving, you know, relationship that
involves that, then you can have hormonal benefits that are sleep
promoting, that may not necessarily be seen if you're just engaging
you know, in the solo singular act of masturbation. So what we
certainly know and I am not someone to take any advice on when it
comes to anything relationship wise or sex wise. -- That's a
different episode of the podcast. -- Yeah, yeah certainly. And
that's not a podcast series that I'm going to be releasing anytime
soon, it's going to be mostly about sleep. Although I will touch on,
I'll release a podcast on sleep and sex. But that's the data that we
have so far. We also know that it works both ways, though. And it's
commonly the same way with sleep. You know, sleep and exercise, sleep
and diet. How you eat can affect how you sleep, how you sleep can
affect how you eat. Same with exercise. And it turns out, it's the
same way with sexual behavior, too. So here, we're talking about
whether sex can help with sleep. Can sleep help with your relationship
and sex? And the answer is, yes, it can. Firstly, we know and we've
spoken a little bit about this, that the reproductive hormones are
under profound sleep regulation. -- Both estrogen and testosterone,
I understand. -- Estrogen, testosterone, as I said. -- Cause we
hear so often about testosterone. But women who, or I should say
anyone who's interested in having higher levels of estrogen or normal
healthy levels of estrogen I presume the data show for estrogen what
the data also show, similarly for testosterone. Which is if you get
too little or poor quality of sleep both sex steroid hormones, as
they're referred to testosterone and estrogen, which are present in
both males and females and every variation thereof, are going to be
diminished below normal healthy levels, correct? -- Yes, estrogen,
testosterone, FSH in women, a key hormone in the regulation for, key
for conception, of course, all of these sex hormones seem to become
significantly disrupted when sleep becomes of short quantity, or poor
quality. We also know that in women, sleep disruption can usually lead
to menstrual cycle disruption. We know this, particularly from
evidence in shift working women where they are nighttime shift
workers, they struggle with sleep during the day, often menstruation
is disrupted or even becomes impaired. But we also know it works this
way, not just for sex hormones, but for sex itself. For example, we
found that for every one hour of sleep, extra sleep that a woman gets
her interest in becoming sexually intimate with her partner increases
by 14%, which is, you know, a non trivial amount. - Substantial. --
And then the final part of I think this equation when it comes to
sleep, and sex is your relationship itself. And there's some great
work here from UC Berkeley by Professor Serena Chen. And what she
found was that restless nights mean for far more brutal fights in your
relationship. And they did this. - And vice versa. -- A number of
different elegant ways, and vice versa as well. -- I mean, not that
I've ever had conflict in relationships. [cross talking] -- You
know, just this is data I've read, I've never experienced that at all.
So, they found reliably that sleep would predict higher likelihood of
relationship conflict. Secondly, if you got into that conflict, the
chances of you resolving it were significantly lower when the parties
had not been sleeping well. Part of the reason is because when you are
not well slept, your empathy goes down. So you're not, you're taking
more of an abrasive stance with your partner, rather than a more
agreeable stance with your partner. So at almost every dimension of a
human loving relationship, sleep can have a dramatic impact. -- I
think these are really important things to underscore, one of the most
common questions I get, because there seems to be community of people
on the internet that are obsessed with this. I don't know who they
are, because it's all, all this internet stuff is shouting into a
tunnel and getting comments back in written form. It's a very bizarre
conversation, so to speak. Is whether or not sexual behavior itself
lowers or increases testosterone? And I went into the data, which
spans many decades actually, both animal studies and human studies.
And it seems just to underscore this as long as we're talking about
this subject that it does seem that sexual activity, sex between two
people does seem to increase testosterone in both. There is this
question about orgasm or no orgasm ejaculation, no ejaculation and
indeed, there do seem to be some effects of restricting ejaculation in
males as a form of further increasing testosterone. So sex without
ejaculation further increasing testosterone. But the data are not
clean. Presumably because organizing these sorts of studies and
getting truth in self reporting is probably hard to get from subjects.
But everything sort of points in the direction that provided that the
relationship is a healthy one, it's consensual, it's age appropriate,
context appropriate, species appropriate that sex between two
individuals does seem to increase the sex steroid hormones
testosterone and estrogen toward healthy ranges. And what I'm hearing
now this sort of Gestalt of the discussion we just had is that that
too can promote sleepiness, restful states, and quality sleep. And I
think this is an important conversation that just hasn't been held
enough. I mean, sooner or later, both in the US and elsewhere, we're
going to have to acknowledge that we are biological organisms of some
sort, and that we have choice in life, about all these things, from
supplementation to sex, or no sex, et cetera, but that they have
profound effects on our core biology. I mean, it's fascinating to me
that the areas of the hypothalamus, the preoptic area, the super optic
areas, those areas which the names might not mean anything to anybody,
besides Matt and I sitting here, but those areas sit cheek to jowl
with each other in the hypothalamus and control, sleep and sex. The
trigger of orgasm, the appetite for food, the appetite for water for
electrolytes. I mean, the hypothalamus is kind of a festival of
neurons with different booths for different primitive behaviors. --
It's such a small, small structure in the brain, but it's the
orchestrator of a vast number of our behaviors disproportionate in
terms of its size versus effect. -- Yeah, I don't think you can go
to this hypothalamic festival without at least seeing all the booths
whether or not you decide to visit them or not. -- I love that
master analogy. -- So I'm glad that we've broached that
conversation. And I hope people will think that we've approached it
with the appropriate level of sensitivity. It's an important one that
we're going to hear more about one way or the other. People are
certainly thinking about this, if not engaging in these sorts of
behaviors or avoiding them. So the more we can understand about the
biology, the better. And so thank you for bringing that topic up.
Because for the record, Matt, tabled it for discussion. -- We were
just like chatting outside and I think we said something about sort of
sex, and I said we can go there. There is so much interesting data.
-- Absolutely, I want to touch on just two remaining topics.
One is are there any unconventional sleep tips or things about sleep
that we've overlooked? If we've covered everything great, but you
know, we hear to keep the room cool. We hear because of this
temperature phenomenon, the light aspects, the considerations about
alcohol, CBD marijuana, cognitive behavioral, tart cherry fruit, kiwi
perhaps. -- Please don't put me on the hook for tart cherries and
kiwis, I was just offering what I know about the data. -- And these
are considerations and whether or not people batch these things, I
won't even list them off now, because they're too many jokes that one
could make. -- And I have no affiliation with any of these products.
[cross talking] -- Well, I'm going to take out stock in a kiwi
company. No I'm just kidding. But the question I have is about any
unconventional or lesser known things, or maybe you do things or you
think about things just in a purely exploratory way, as a scientist of
that, you know, the what if kind of things that, yeah, what if it
turns out that and I hear I just, I got a blank there for you to fill
in. -- I think, you know, beyond the standard, you know, fair that
I've dished out plenty of times of sleep hygiene of you know,
regularity, temperature, darkness, alcohol, caffeine, and we've spoken
about all of those. What are some more unconventional tips, I guess?
The first one, which is unconventional along the lines of naps. If
you've had a bad night of sleep, let's say that you're starting to
emerge with insomnia and you've had a bad night of sleep, the advice
and I learned this from my wonderful colleague, Michael Perlis, do
nothing. What I mean by that is, don't wake up any later, don't sleep
in the following day to try and make up for it, don't nap during the
day, don't consume extra caffeine to wake you up, to try to get you
through the day, and don't go to bed any earlier to think that you're
going to compensate. And I can explain all of those things. But if you
wake up later, you're not going to be sleepy until late in the
evening, so you're going to go to bed at your normal time and you
won't be sleeping, you'll think well, I just came off a bad night of
sleep. And now I still, I can't even get to sleep and it's my normal
time. It's because you slept in later than you would otherwise, and
you reduce the window of adenosine accumulation before your normal
bedtime. So don't go, don't wake up any later. Don't use more caffeine
for the reasons that are obvious, because that's only going to crank
you and keep you awake the following night or decrease the probability
of a good following night of recovery sleep. Third, I mentioned don't
take naps, because once again, that will just take, you know, naps,
particularly later in the afternoon, I almost liken them to snacking
before a main meal, it just takes your appetite off the edge of that
main meal of sleep, so don't do it. And then finally, don't go to bed
any earlier, resist and resist and go to bed at your normal time. What
I want to try and do is prevent you from thinking I had such a bad
night last night and I normally go to bed at 10:30, I'm just going to
get into bed at nine o'clock, because last night was just so bad. But
that's not your natural bedtime, and it's not aligned with your
natural chronotype because presumably you kind of know something about
that, our morning time, evening time, you're trying to sleep in
harmony, which is usually how you get best quality sleep. But you go
to bed at nine, and my body is not ready to sleep at nine o'clock. But
I'm worried because I had a bad night of sleep last night so I get
into bed, and now I'm tossing and turning for the first hour and a
half because it's not my natural sleep window, but I just thought it
was a good idea. And if I didn't know anything about sleep, I would
think all of these same things too. So I'm not finger wagging. But
after if I have a bad night of sleep, and I am not immune, just
because I know a little bit about sleep doesn't mean I don't have my
bad nights, I do. Doesn't mean I haven't had bouts of insomnia in my
life, I have. But after a bad night of sleep, I do nothing. I don't do
any of those four things. I think the second tip I would offer in
terms of unconventional is have a wind down routine. Many of us think
of sleep as if it's like a light switch, that we just jump into bed,
and when we turn the light out sleep should arrive in that same way.
Just the binary you know it's on or it's off. Sleep is a physiological
process, it's much more like landing a plane, it takes time to
gradually descend down onto the terra firma of what we call good solid
sleep at night. Find out whatever works for you and it could be light
stretching, I usually meditate for about 10 or 15 minutes before bed.
Some people like reading, try not to watch television in bed that's
usually advised against. -- Something that doesn't emit too much
light to your eyes. -- Too much light, too activating, you know, you
can listen to relaxing podcasts, although we can speak about
technology in the bedroom too. But have some kind of a wind down
routine. It's you know, it's almost like you know, you wouldn't race
into your garage and come to a screeching halt from 60 miles an hour,
you typically down, shift your gears and you slow down as you come
into the garage, that's the same thing with with sleep too. So that's
the second thing, have some kind of a wind down routine, find what
works for you. Maybe it's taking a hot bath or a warm shower, and then
stick to it. Just we do this with kids all the time, we find out what
their bedroom, sorry, their bedtime regiment is and then we just stick
to it faithfully 'cause we humans are the same way too. The third
thing is a myth, don't count sheep. There's a study done here at UC
Berkeley, I didn't do this today, I wish I did, it's by my colleague,
Professor Allison Harvey. And they found that counting sheep actually
made it harder to fall asleep. It made matters worse. As a conter
sorry counter measure to that what they did find was that taking
yourself on some kind of a mental walk, so think about a nice walk
that you take in nature or a walk on the beach, or even a walk around
an urban environment. -- Just visualizing that. -- And visualizing
that, that seemed to be beneficial. The other thing about sort of that
idea of shifting focus away from your mind itself, get your mind off
itself is a good piece of advice. Catharsis, you can try to write down
all of the concerns that you have, and do this not right before bed,
but usually an hour or two before bed. Some people call it a worry
journal. And to me, it's a little bit like closing down all of the
emotional tabs on my browser. Because if I shut the computer down and
all of those tabs are still open, I'm going to come back in the
morning, and the computer's red hot the fans going because it didn't
go to sleep, because it couldn't because there were too many tabs
active and open. I think it's the same way with sleep as well, so try
to think about doing that. So just vomit out all of your concerns on
the page. -- I like that, cause my 3am waking is often associated
with me writing down the list of things that I forgot to do that I
need to do. And once I eventually wake up from the later night, second
half of the night's sleep, that stuff seems much more tractable and
reasonable, but it sure would be great to get that stuff out of the
way before sleep. -- Well, there's also something that I don't think
people have spoken about a lot. And I'd like to research it, which is
difficulty and anxiety at night in the dark, is not the same
difficulty and anxiety in the light of day. And when we have those
thoughts at night, it comes with a magnitude of rumination and
catastrophization that is disproportionate to that which you would
describe when you are awake. And I don't know what's going on about
the brain, and thought and emotion at the time, I've got a bunch of
theories as to why, and that's why I like the idea of closing up
zipping up all of those different components, just get them out on the
page. And it feel, and I at first thought this just sounds like who
its it sounds very Berkeley, it's kind of Kumbaya, we all hold hands,
and, you know, we all come at the end of the day. But then the data
started coming out really good studies from good people. And they
found that keeping one of those journals decreased the time it takes
you to fall asleep by 50%, five, zero. -- Amazing that's
substantial. - That's well on par with any pharmaceutical agent. --
I'm convinced that I've long thought that the worries and concerns and
ideas I have at three, 4am I've learned to not place any stock in
them. Because something, I'm glad that you might decide to eventually
look at this in your laboratory because I feel like something is
melted away or altered. I suspect it's in the regulation of the
autonomic nervous system, that it makes sense why a concern at three,
4am ought to evoke more of a panic sense than a concern sense. And
certainly, that's my experience, although not, fortunate to not suffer
from full blown panic attacks. But everything seems worse at three,
4am provided you're awake. -- And we need to sort of look into that
because, you know, if you look at suicide rates, around the 24 hour
clock face, disproportionately higher rates in those middle sort of
night hours. So now, I don't know if that's causative or not, but
something you know, it could just be that that's the time when we're
mostly lonely, and we're by ourselves. And that's the reason. So it's
got nothing to do with sleep or the night time, I don't know. So
that's the third thing, I think the fourth sort of little tip I would
give that's unconventional, is remove all clock faces from your
bedroom. -- Including your phone. -- Including your phone, and
resist checking it. Now I know and I can speak about the phone too
that genie of technology is out the bottle. And it's not going back in
anytime soon. So we've got to think a scientist and sleep scientist,
you know, as to what we do with you know, phones in the bedroom. --
Years ago, I was a counselor at a Summer camp I worked with at risk
kids and there was a phrase that comes to mind here, it's be a
channel, not a dam. Because when you try and dam certain kinds of
behavior, physically dam certain kinds of behavior and not morally
dam, that too, it just creeps over the edge, and you get a waterfall.
So it has to be a channel. The phone and devices have to be worked
with and negotiated not eliminated. -- That's right and you know,
think about those mindfully too but clock faces, remove all of those,
because if you are having, you know, a tough night, knowing that it's
3:22 in the morning, or it's 4:48 in the morning, does not help you in
the slightest. And it's only going to make matters worse than better.
So try to remove all clock faces. And I think that's one of those
other tips that some people have found helpful. But those would be
sort of some slightly unconventional, I guess more than your stock
fare of here are the five tips for sleep hygiene tonight, so. --
Those are terrific sleep tips, and several of which, if not all of
which I'm going to incorporate.
Matt, this has been an amazing, deep dive on sleep and it's positive
and negative regulators. -- I hope it hasn't been too long. -- No
this has been great. -- Please cut it down, shorten it to, you know,
the five minutes of meaningful stuff that I offered. -- Absolutely
not, it is chock a block full of valuable takeaways. It's been
tremendously fun for me to dissect out this incredible aspect of our
lives that we call sleep with a fellow scientist and a fellow public
educator. I want to say several things. First of all, we should say
where people can find you although it shouldn't be that difficult
these days. You're a very present on the internet. - [Matthew]
Unfortunately. - For better or for worse. I think it's wonderful that
you're out there. Look, it's a public health service that you're
doing. No one requires you or any other scientist to get out and share
this information. My sense of you knowing you a bit, and from
following your work very closely both your scientific work in detail
and your public facing educational work is that you very much want the
best for people. And it's an interesting thing as a scientist or a
clinician, to know that the that certain answers exist, that we don't
have all the answers, but that there is a better path, there are
better ways and people can benefit in a myriad of ways. So, for that,
because I know that to be very genuine in you, you want the best for
people and you're offering tremendous advice and considerations and
people can take it or leave it that's the way I view it. I also want
to thank you for taking the time out of your day to sit with me here
and have this discussion. -- Not at all, no at all, it's a
privilege, it's a delight, you know, you and I, I think we're alike
kind in lots of ways. And I take you as a shining example of how you
can effectively connect with the public. And I know that we've had our
conversations before we ever sat down to talk together about, you
know, how to think about communicating with the public and the pros
and cons of that. And I've just loved your opinions. I've been
drinking it all in. And then I think the third thing I'd like to say
is, thank you for being such an incredible sleep ambassador, the
series that you've released on sleep, the way that you speak about
sleep, the way that you moderate and have championed sleep. It is
remarkable. So thank you for just being you know, a brother in arms in
that way. -- But we are and thanks for those those words. 99% of
what I discussed there was the work of you and your colleagues in the
sleep field. So proper acknowledgement, but thank you, where can
people learn more about what you're doing currently? And what's coming
next? You're on Twitter. -- I am on Twitter I typically tweet. --
As the sleep diplomat. -- So, no it's just sleep diplomat -- Sleep
diplomat on Twitter. -- Sleep diplomat on Twitter, sleepdiplomat.com
website, if you want to learn more about the science that we do here,
it's humansleepscience.com. It's the Center for Human Sleep Science.
You can pick up a copy of the book, if you want. It's called "Why We
Sleep?" if you're curious about sleep, that's one path to take and
it's my view. -- Is there another might someday in the future? --
I think there may be, yeah. -- Great, great, many, many millions of
people will be very happy to hear that. -- I think it's starting to
take hold. And then as we discussed, I am more than kicking around the
idea of a short form podcast rather than a long form, not long form,
because I don't have the mental capacity or the interviewing, just
capability that someone like you has. So it will probably just be
monologue short form. So if there is some interest, I'll probably do
that as well. So those are the ways that people can find me. But
overall, if you're interested in sleep, just listen to Andrew. That's
thing I can tell people. -- All right, well now we're bating back
and forth the vector of action so to speak, but I do hope you'll start
a podcast however brief or lengthy these episodes turn out to be
because I do believe that's a great venue to get information out into
the world. And we don't just want to hear more from Matt Walker, I
speak for many people, we need to, the work you're doing is both
influential, but more importantly, it is important work. It has the
impact that's needed, especially in this day and age where science and
medicine, public health, and the issues of the world, etcetera, are
really converging. So I know I speak on behalf of a tremendous number
of people, when I just say thank you for doing the work you do and for
being you. - [Matthew] Thank you. -- And thanks for being a good
friend. -- Likewise, too and by the way, I'm just going to note that
it was nice that the two of us both got the Johnny Cash memo about how
to dress today. It seems as though we're both kind of we got that same
memo, which will mean nothing to people who are listening, but if
you're watching the video, you'll probably see what I mean. Andrew,
thank you for taking this time. Thank you so much. -- Thanks so much
Matt. Thank you for joining me for my discussion with Dr. Matt Walker.
Please also check out his podcast the Matt Walker podcast. A link to
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