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Sunday, September 20, 2015

Smartphones Ruin Sleep


Smartphones Ruin More Than Your Sleep — They May Also Be Destroying Your Vision

KEVIN LORIA Sep. 9, 2014


If you are buying a new iPhone, don't use it in bed — and not just because nighttime smartphone use messes up your sleep cycle.

The blue light from personal electronic devices has also been linked to serious physical and mental health problems.

Blue light is part of the full light spectrum, which means we're exposed to it by the sun every day. However, nighttime exposure to that light, which is emitted at high levels by smartphones, tablets, laptops, and other LED screens, may be damaging your vision. It also suppresses production of the hormone melatonin, which throws off your body's natural sleep cues.

When your melatonin levels and sleep cycle go haywire, your risk goes up for a wide range of ailments, from depression to cancer.

Our various personal electronic devices emit blue light because it's so bright. That's the only way we can see those screens when the sun is shining. But we've started to have regular close-up nighttime exposure to this light only in the past 10 or 20 years, as a recent Gigaom story on the topic notes.

Now we're really starting to see the consequences.

Blue Light At Night

1. The damage that this habit does to our eyes alone is both significant and surprising. Direct exposure to blue light can cause damage to the retina. The American Macular Degeneration Foundation warns that retinal damage caused by blue light may lead to macular degeneration, which causes the loss of central vision — the ability to see what's in front of you.

It should be noted however, that most studies show this effect with the light being held very close to the retina, which may not exactly replicate typical phone use.

2. There may also be a link between cataracts and blue light, though more research is needed. Gigaom cited an eye doctor who says he's starting to see 35-year-olds with eyes that are as cloudy with cataracts as 75-year-olds. Though a single account can't prove that blue light exposure causes cataracts — this doctor just thinks there's a link, which doesn't count as evidence — the idea is being investigated. Still, studies haven't concluded anything certain yet.

3. Exposure to blue light at night can ruin sleep. Bright blue light disrupts the brain's production of melatonin, a hormone that helps regulate the sleep cycle. That's fine in the morning, but our brains are supposed to start producing melatonin when we are ready for sleep, and blue light interferes with that process. That's why smartphones ruin sleep, and messing with your sleep has a long list of associated health consequences that range from obesity to genetic disruption and memory problems.

4. Sleep disturbance and "light at night" have been linked to higher cancer risk, particularly for breast and prostate cancers. In addition to helping us sleep, melatonin also functions as an antioxidant. And while more research is needed, researchers have pointed to "uninterrupted darkness" as potentially protective against cancer. People whose natural melatonin production is suppressed are at a higher risk for a variety of cancers, though a causal relationship has not been found.

5. Blue light may also take a toll on mental health. Research also shows that people whose melatonin levels are suppressed and whose body clocks are thrown off by light exposure are more prone to depression.
Our Weird Relationship With Blue Light

Despite the way this may sound, it doesn't mean that blue light is bad all the time. At times, it's actually beneficial to your health.

Light tells us when to wake and when to sleep. When bright blue light sends a signal to the brain to stop producing melatonin, it also primes your brain to start production of the hormone again later — in theory while you are getting ready for bed.

Experts say that getting an hour of sunlight in the morning helps people regulate their melatonin production and sleep cycle. They recommend getting some morning light without wearing sunglasses, so light gets through the retina and signals the pineal gland, which is what actually controls melatonin production.

That's great in the A.M., but when nighttime screen usage convinces our brains that it's morning and they shouldn't produce melatonin, that starts to wreak havoc on our bodies.

We can't avoid smartphones, computers, and tablets all the time. But we should try to limit our exposure at night. Sometimes, wearing amber glasses that block blue light or using apps that limit the amount of blue light coming from our screens may help.

Taking breaks from screen time is a good idea too – especially right before and in bed.



READ MORE: Your Smartphone Is Destroying Your Sleep
SEE ALSO: 25 Horrible Things That Happen If You Don't Get Enough Sleep

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/smartphones-effect-on-vision-and-health-2014-9#ixzz3fZ0rLaqt


Caffeine at Night May Disrupt the Body's Internal Clock – WebMD


Caffeine at Night May Disrupt Your Internal Clock


And that could make you want to sleep later, say researchers, who see possible treatment for jet lag





WebMD News from HealthDay




By Randy Dotinga


HealthDay Reporter



WEDNESDAY, Sept. 16, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- A small and preliminary study suggests that caffeine does more than serve as an eye-opener: When consumed a few hours before bed, the most widely consumed psychoactive drug in the world seems to disrupt the body's internal clock.


And this could cause jet lag-style sluggishness during daylight hours, the study authors suggest.





The research doesn't say anything about how coffee consumption in the morning or throughout the day may affect the body's internal clock. And the findings need to be confirmed.


Still, it seems likely that coffee at night "isn't just keeping you awake," said study co-author and sleep researcher Kenneth Wright Jr., a professor with the Department of Integrative Physiology at the University of Colorado at Boulder. "It's also pushing your [internal] clock later so you want to go to sleep later."


At issue: The body's circadian clock, which sets biological rhythms such as sleep/wake cycles. Every cell in the human body has a clock, Wright said.


The new study aims to understand how caffeine may affect the body clock. Other research has suggested that caffeine disrupts body clocks in other organisms and species such as algae, fruit flies and perhaps mice, he said.


Wright and his colleagues examined five people who were studied over 49 days. Three hours before their regular bedtime, they were assigned to consume a capsule of caffeine equal to a double espresso -- with the amount adjusted to their body size -- or a placebo capsule. They were also exposed to either bright or dim light. Bright light can reset the body clock and make people want to go to bed later.


The researchers found that the caffeine appeared to delay the body clocks of the study participants by 40 minutes, about half the delay linked to exposure to bright light.


The amount of caffeine was small, the equivalent of about a double espresso or medium cup of coffee for most people, Wright said. "We're not talking about a lot of caffeine here."


The study suggests that caffeine affects signaling within cells, disrupting a "core component" of the cellular circadian clock.






Sleep researcher Jamie Zeitzer, an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University, praised the study, noting that it suggests caffeine has an effect beyond making people feel more alert by reducing or masking the need for sleep.

But, he added, the number of participants in the study was very small, making it hard to apply the findings to people in general. And the effect of caffeine itself seems to add little to the effects of bright light therapy, which may limit "this as a typical countermeasure for jet lag or shift work," he said.

If the new study findings can be confirmed, what do they mean for people who get caffeine through coffee and other drinks and foods? The research seems to confirm what coffee fans already know: Don't down a cup of joe when it's late if you want to avoid feeling sluggish the next day due to lack of sleep.

"Removing coffee from your diet or just having it in the morning might help you achieve earlier bedtimes and wake times," Wright said.

But caffeine before bed isn't necessarily a bad thing for everyone, he said, since people's sleep cycles vary. And, Wright added, the research raises the prospect of a medical advance: It's possible that caffeine could be used to treat jet lag since it seems to have the power to adjust body clocks.


Zeitzer, the Stanford researcher, cautioned that using caffeine to combat jet lag "would need to be done judiciously and only in those people in whom caffeine does not have a negative impact on sleep."

The study appears in the Sept. 16 issue of Science Translational Medicine.


Article Sources 
SOURCES: Kenneth Wright Jr., Ph.D., professor, Department of Integrative Physiology, and director, Sleep and Chronobiology Laboratory, University of Colorado at Boulder; Jamie Zeitzer, Ph.D., assistant professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine, Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif.; Sept. 16, 2015, Science Translational Medicine