Long
Hours, Little Sleep Hard on a Guy's Heart
If
you are a man who works long hours and never gets enough sleep, you
may be begging for a heart attack.
In
a new study from Japan, men who often worked more than 60 hours a week
and got five hours or less of sleep a night had twice the risk of suffering
a heart attack.
The
study builds on and confirms previous research, says study author Dr.
Ying Liu, a research fellow at the National Cancer Center
in Tokyo and a graduate student at Kyushu University in Fukuoka. It
appears in the July issue of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine.
"Previous
studies in the United States and Europe, as well as in Japan, have suggested
that long work hours and insufficient sleep are related to heart attack,
and our findings confirm their results," Liu says.
The
findings from the Japanese study probably apply to American men as well,
Liu says. However, he is not sure whether women are at the same risk
if they work to excess and sleep too little because not enough research
has been done on them.
In
the United States, full-time workers average a 42.9 hour work week,
according to the latest figures from the US Bureau of Labor
Statistics, although many workers regularly log 60 hours or
more.
Details
of the Study
Liu
and his colleagues evaluated 260 men, aged 40 to 79, who had been admitted
to a hospital for a heart attack for the first time. All survived the
attack. The researchers compared this group with 445 men with no history
of heart attacks who were in the same age range and lived in the same
areas.
Study
subjects provided information about their usual work week, their sleep
habits, and their days off during the past month and the past year.
They also discussed any medical conditions that might boost their heart
attack risk, such as high blood pressure and high blood cholesterol.
Lack
of Sleep and Long Work Hours Increase Risk of Heart Attack
Even
when the researchers controlled for the known risk factors, they found
that lack of sleep and long hours were associated with heart attack.
Those who worked 60-plus hours a week—not uncommon in Japan—had
double the heart attack risk of those who worked 40 hours or less. Also,
those who suffered heart attacks often slept for five or fewer hours
a night.
"The
joint effect of work hours and lack of sleep is the unique point of
our study," Liu says.
Study's
Findings Not Surprising
A US
sleep expert calls the study findings interesting, but not surprising.
"The
conclusions reflect what we clinically think to be true," says Dr. Susan
Sprau, an associate clinical professor of medicine at the University
of California, Los Angeles, and a sleep disorders expert at Santa Monica-UCLA
Medical Center.
Adequate
sleep is crucial for good health, she says, adding that most adults
need eight hours of sleep to function best.
Another
American expert, cardiologist Dr. Thomas Pickering, calls the study
findings "very plausible."
Many
experts have talked about the negative effects of stress from too much
work and too little sleep, Pickering says. "But here is some fairly
concrete evidence that it does matter, that some of us are working ourselves
into the ground," he says.
Exactly
how the lack of sleep and excess work hours trigger a heart attack is
not known for sure. Liu speculates both can increase blood pressure
and heart rate, and the chronic stress can induce heart function abnormalities.
Sprau
agrees that several theories could explain how lack of sleep and excess
work do a double whammy on the heart. They include the "sympathetic
drive" theory, in which the activity of the sympathetic nervous system—the
so-called "fight or flight" response—might increase to a point
where it triggers a heart attack. Or, insufficient sleep might have
an adverse effect on blood platelets, which promote clotting, she says.
Reducing
the Potential Damage on the Heart
Is
there any way to undo the damage if a hectic work schedule is unavoidable
and there is no time to get enough sleep?
"You
can compensate by taking more days rest if possible, or eat more healthfully
to offset the risk," Liu says. "But I don't know whether doing more
exercise should be recommended. Maybe moderate exercise, such as walking
or jogging, is good for a person with a sedentary job. But it may not
be good for one who is tired out with [manual] labor."
Always
consult your physician for more information.
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