One vital component of your health that you might be neglecting is precious sleep. It is absolutely critical for both your short and long term health, and in our modern society, millions of people don’t get sufficient sleep. It’s well known that the ideal amount for optimal health is eight hours. Truthfully, the amount needed varies from person to person. Everybody is different and individual factors like age, overall health, stress level, and activity level can heavily influence how much you actually need.

 

Sleep Quality & Circadian Rhythm 

When it comes to sleep, quality is just as, if not more, important than quantity. Spending nine hours tossing and turning without ever entering deep sleep will not leave you refreshed and ready to go in the morning. What you need is an adequate amount of REM (rapid eye movement) each night. This is one of the deepest sleep phases where you experience your most vivid dreams.

 

Circadian rhythm or individual internal clock controls the sleep cycle. They developed in our ancestors in response to the natural day/night and seasonal cycles of the earth. It’s the reason why humans aren’t innately nocturnal and tend to be active during the day. These modern times can throw off your circadian rhythm. Artificial lighting, days spent working indoors, an unnatural diet, and night shift work may all contribute to a disordered internal clock. A variety of consequences – ranging from mild fatigue and depression to seasonal affective disorder (SAD) to even worse – can result from living with an out of balance circadian rhythm (1).


Even breaking your sleep cycle by frequently getting up to urinate during the night may cause depression (2). However, there are several steps you can take to get high-quality sleep and maintain a balanced circadian rhythm. 

 

Tip 1: Be Careful with Caffeine

Chances are that you consume at least some caffeine almost every day. While coffee is the most obvious culprit, caffeine is also present in many sodas, teas, and chocolate products. It’s no big deal to enjoy a morning java, but try to limit your intake. Even more importantly, avoid consuming caffeine past about mid-morning. The effects of caffeine can last seven hours or more, so it’s important that it’s all out of your system by bedtime. In fact, a 2014 study reinforced what we pretty much already knew, caffeine can significantly disturb your sleep (3).

 

Tip 2: Eat Dinner About 4 Hours Before Bed

You certainly don’t have to grab the early bird buffet special at 4 pm, but neither should you eat dinner at 10 pm and hit the sack one hour later. That’s because your body breaks down carbohydrates, or sugars, over time. You don’t need a sugar spike for energy while you’re sleeping, and an increase in blood glucose can actually cause you to have fitful, shallow sleep. Your best bet is to eat a dinner containing complex carbohydrates, like starch, about four hours before going to sleep. This will allow your body time to breakdown the carbs, giving you adequate energy for your remaining time awake while avoiding the middle of the night glucose spike.

 

Screen Time
Don’t Sleep at the Screen!

 

Tip 3: Limit Your Screen Time

If you fall asleep with a laptop or smartphone, you’re certainly not alone. Still, this type of screen time is a habit worth breaking. Computer monitors, televisions, and phone screens give off blue light, which interferes with the action of melatonin. Melatonin is a hormone that promotes sleepiness and helps you actually get to sleep. Blue light tricks your body into believing it’s still daylight outside and not yet time for sleep. Remember, your body’s systems haven’t caught up with modern technology. Do yourself a favour by discontinuing screen time at least two hours before bed.

 

Tip 4: Make Your Bedroom Sleep Hygienic

Just like you practice oral hygiene by brushing your teeth before bed, you need to observe sleep hygiene for a good night’s sleep. This means dedicating your bedroom to sleep and limiting distractions. Keep it nice and dark, as studies have shown a connection between melatonin levels and more light exposure, and don’t let the temperature get higher than about 21 degrees C– not a problem during the Albertan winters (4). Finally, try to insulate yourself from any unnecessary noise so that you’re not prematurely roused from restful sleep.

 

Tip 5: See Your Functional Medicine Doctor

Dr. Lynne Murfin treats all sorts of sleep disorders and can help discover the cause of your issue. Her training and experience are extensive. While there are many different things that can upset your circadian rhythm, there are also many treatments available, many of them natural.

For example, the stress response (“fight or flight”) has a huge effect on sleep quality, but this can be addressed in a variety of ways. Mind-body exercises guided by Dr. Murfin or her lifestyle educator can help reduce the stress and anxiety, and supplements.

 

Supplements for Sleep

Taking supplements for sleep is another option your functional medicine doctor may recommend. Supplemental B12 taken upon arising in the mornings may “reset” your stress response mechanism. In fact, vitamin B12 shows to have an effect on stress hormones in lab rats (5).

 

Another supplement that has shown promising results is valproic acid. This compound, in low doses, demonstrated an ability to reduce depression and restore circadian rhythm in a patient with an associated disorder (6).

 

Hormones for Sleep

Additionally, the use of hormones under Dr. Murfin’s direction can aid you in getting consistent, good sleep. If you’re not producing enough melatonin, small doses of this hormone could help in reducing your sleep latency, or the time it takes you to fall asleep. Melatonin is vital to the circadian rhythm. A study published in the journal Sleep Science even showed a correlation between low melatonin and the development of dementia in elderly patients (7).

 

Other substances that can have a positive effect include serotonin, gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA), and the female sex hormone progesterone. These compounds all frequently become imbalanced by a number of factors and need correction. For example, progesterone may protect against developing obstructive sleep apnea, a common sleep disorder (8)

 

GABA is a neurotransmitter involved in sleep maintenance. Low amounts of GABA have an association with insomnia, but fortunately, GABA supplements are available (11). Progesterone levels may drop during menopause, but research has shown that hormone therapy can result in better sleep (9).

 

Serotonin also plays its part in sleep, specifically maintenance. This neurotransmitter makes sure that you stay asleep long enough to truly rest. Serotonin has long been recognized to have a role in depression, with low levels contributing to depressive symptoms. It’s now known that serotonin can also directly affect the adrenal glands, crucial components in the stress response (10).

Controlling your stress response is a vital part of getting good sleep.


Consult a Qualified Physician

 

All neurotransmitters and hormonal supplements should be taken under the close monitoring of a qualified physician. Dr. Murfin can assist you in getting the best sleep possible. Lifestyle changes, nutrition support, and supplements may all contain the answers to your difficulties. Just remember – the road to good, and continued health – starts with you.

 

References:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28012610
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28129482
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25115507
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28042611
http://www.jpsbr.org/index_htm_files/JPSBR14RS5036.pdf
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28008257
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28154742
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28103130
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25218407
10 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8637392
11 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2579978

 

About Dr. Murfin:

Dr. Murfin is wholeheartedly focused on her life’s mission to help people heal and achieve extraordinary outcomes. She believes that health is more than merely the absence of disease. It is a total state of physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, and social wellbeing through the creation of a whole and meaningful life. Dr. Murfin leaves no stone unturned to determine the root cause of illness or imbalance.