A new study from researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham found that for healthy, normal-weight people aged 45 and older, getting less than six hours of sleep a night could boost the risk of stroke. NBC's Dr. Nancy Snyderman reports.

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Too few hours of sleep can raise the risk of stroke significantly, even among healthy, normal-weight people, a new study finds.
Attention, busy middle-aged folks. You may be healthy and thin, but if you habitually sleep less than six hours a night, you still could be boosting your risk of a stroke.
That’s the surprising conclusion of a new study being presented Monday at SLEEP 2012, the annual meeting of the nation’s sleep experts.
Getting too little shut-eye appeared to more than quadruple the risk of stroke symptoms among healthy, normal-weight people aged 45 and older, according to a study of some 5,600 people followed for up to three years.
“The really important take-home message is this: Don’t blow it off. Sleep is just as important as diet and exercise,” said Megan Ruiter, the University of Alabama at Birmingham researcher who led the study.
Experts recommend that healthy adults get between seven and nine hours of sleep a night. But about one in three U.S. workers regularly gets less than seven hours of snooze time, according to a recent government health report.
Ruiter and her colleagues reviewed data from some 30,239 people participating in the REGARDS study – Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke – sponsored by the National Institutes of Health.
Of those, they teased out some 5,666 people who were healthy at the start of the study – no history of stroke, stroke symptoms, so-called “mini-stroke” or transient ischemic attack, or elevated risk for sleep apnea and other sleep-disordered breathing problems.
“We eliminated all the people who were high risk,” Ruiter said.
But when they looked more closely at the sleep habits of those people and adjusted for their weight, they found what Ruiter said were unexpected results.
In people who fell into normal weight categories -- a body mass index of 18.5 to nearly 25 -- those who reported sleeping less than six hours a night were at about 4.5 times greater risk of developing stroke symptoms than whose who slept seven and eight hours a night. Surprisingly, that increase wasn't apparent in overweight or obese people who slept less.
“Our thought is that habitually sleeping less than six hours is kind of like a precursor,” said Ruiter. “It might kind of lead to some of these stronger and more severe risk factors later on.”
That’s dismaying news to Mark Wolfe, 49, a busy teacher, husband and father of four from Corvallis, Ore., who has run the Boston Marathon eight times and routinely gets six hours of sleep or less, waking at 4:05 a.m. on weekdays in order to train.
“Because I’m leading a very active and healthy life, I don’t expect to drop dead from a stroke,” said Wolfe, who is tall and thin, with a BMI of about 21.
But there’s no question, adults function best with more sleep than six hours a night, experts say. Chronic sleep deprivation caused by getting too little most nights may boost the risk of stroke because it causes changes in the autonomic functions of the body, including blood pressure, heart rate, inflammation and glucose levels, said Dr. Phyllis C. Zee, associate director for Sleep & Circadian Biology at the Northwestern University School of Medicine.
“It not only affects the blood vessels to the heart and body, but also to the brain,” said Zee, who was not involved in the study presented at the meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.
It will take more research to determine whether short sleep actually results in more full-blown strokes for the REGARDS participants. But in the meantime, Ruiter said the study offers cautions for Wolfe and other middle-aged people who maintain their weight but scrimp on sleep.
“The important thing now is just to have physicians and people be more aware that the amount and quality of sleep might be important for how they feel and the quality of their health,” she said.
Related stories:
- One-third of US workers don't get enough sleep
- Out of whack sleep habits can cause diabetes
- 6 signs you need more sleep
- Watch it! Your job may give you a stroke
A recent study from the Centers for Disease control found about a third of working adults get only six or fewer hours of sleep every day, which increases the risk of health problems. NBC's Robert Bazell reports.



I have health problems that make sleeping extremely painful and uncomfortable so I consider myself lucky if I get 6 hours of sleep a night, I usually have to suffer through two or more sleepless nights a week.
What about those under 45 who get too little rest? Does it not pile up and cause health issues even if after hitting 45 those people start getting 8 hours of sleep? People can still have health problems in their 30s and even younger if they only sleep 3-4 hours every night anyway.
Just a thought: maybe there is something in the biochemistry of sleep - an enzyme that interrupts sleep - that is an indicator of the propensity for strokes?
just phenibut it. who cares why your not sleeping force it dammit
That's why always take me a ggod long nap if I feel under rested.
Just sleep on the job. Most government jobs allow this.
This article almost put me to sleep. Does that count?
Great, another thing to worry about and lose more sleep.
I guess they are trying to tell us to rest a little more.
We have all managed at some point in time with little sleep below what is stated as a minimum for many different reasons.
Don't think I would sleep much with Hot in Miami close by!!
Last year I habitually got around 5 hours every night and it was terrible. Since then I have aimed for 7-8 and my mood, my concentration, etc has improved so much. If you don't get enough sleep you are just hurting yourself
I am 62 this year. I haven't averaged more than 4 hours sleep a night in more than 40 years. Usually at the start of the week, I sleep about 3 hours a night till about the weekend then I crash out for about 6 hours and start the cycle again. It's only been in the last few years that I have had health problems and I'm pretty sure lack of sleep is not what caused them.
We need to remember, folks, that this result does not necessarily mean a direct cause-effect relationship. For example, there are lots of reasons people may have trouble getting enough sleep. Stress, anxiety and pain being the most common of these. These sources of poor sleep can cause changes in physiology such as higher blood pressure which is associated with increases in heart attacks and strokes. Of course, not getting enough sleep can cause its own set of problems that may contribute. Lets just remember to keep an eye on the larger perspective and not jump to overly simplistic conclusions. Life's rarely as simple as many would lead us to believe.
Its mad ...i am on night shift and get 5 hours sleep a day..
This is so true - sometimes when I can't sleep I have a stroke!
Pretty much everything is bad for you..... so whats the point?
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