8 hours of sleep and exercise are best

Q: Is it better for overall health to get eight hours of sleep per night during the week but not have time to exercise, or to get 6 1/2 to seven hours of sleep per night and fit in a morning workout?

A: "That's a terrible choice," said Dr. Charles Czeisler, a sleep expert at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston. Sleep and exercise are crucial to health and shouldn't be pitted against each other, Czeisler said.

Sleep is important for workouts, he noted, because it reduces the risk of injury and allows muscles to recover. Lack of sleep weakens the immune system, making people more likely to become sick -- which means missing workouts.

Sacrificing sleep has also been tied to weight gain, cardiovascular disease and diabetes, among other health problems. Of course, regular exercise provides a lot of benefits, too, including sounder sleep.

Czeisler also noted that going to bed late, particularly if you're using electronic devices and sitting under bright lights before bedtime, shifts the body's circadian rhythms later. But people still need about eight hours of sleep per night. So if you get up after 6 1/2 to work out, "you're essentially exercising during your biological night," he said.

Research from Northwestern University suggests that muscle cells also have circadian rhythms, and that they perform and recover much better during the biological daytime than the biological night. "So, getting up during your biological night to exercise is counterproductive," Czeisler said.

Desiree Ahrens, a certified health and wellness coach at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said that for the time-starved, there are ways to sneak exercise into the day without heading to the gym or a formal exercise class.

Running up the stairs in your house provides just as much exercise as a workout on a stair climber, she noted. Workouts can also be broken down into small chunks of activity throughout the day. "Be a little more creative with the workouts," she suggested.

Also, if you have young children at home, it's OK to acknowledge that these may not be the most workout-intensive years of your life, Ahrens said. No need to catastrophize and worry you'll never exercise again.

ActiveStyle on 01/22/2018

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