The connection between sleep
and heart disease is a two-way street: Poor sleep can contribute to heart
disease, and heart disease can disturb sleep, reports the January 2007
issue of the Harvard Heart Letter.
Poor sleep has been linked with high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis,
heart failure, heart attack and stroke, diabetes, and obesity. The thread
that ties these together may be inflammation, the body's response to
injury, infection, irritation, or disease. Poor sleep increases levels of
C-reactive protein and other substances that reflect active inflammation.
It also revs up the body's sympathetic nervous system, which is activated
by fright or stress.
Sometimes heart disease is a cause of poor sleep. People with heart
failure may wake up with trouble breathing, which stems from fluid buildup
in the lungs. There's also some evidence that heart failure leads to sleep
apnea, a breathing problem that can awaken a person repeatedly throughout
the night. Some people have nighttime angina (chest pain), bouts of atrial
fibrillation, or palpitations (the sensation of a racing or pounding heart)
that disturb sleep.
The Harvard Heart Letter suggests that if you aren't getting enough
sleep, you may need better sleep habits like the ones listed below. If
these don't work, talk with your doctor about having a sleep evaluation.
Go to bed and get up at the same time every day.
Use your bed only for sleeping or sex.
If you can't sleep, get out of bed.
Go easy on alcohol and caffeine; avoid nicotine.
Exercise in the late afternoon.
Harvard Health Publications
health.harvard.edu/heart