Home Subtitle videos Le sommeil est votre super-pouvoir

Le sommeil est votre super-pouvoir

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00:04

Thank you very much.

00:05

Well, I would like to start with testicles.

00:10

(Laughter)

00:12

Men who sleep five hours a night

00:15

have significantly smaller testicles than those who sleep seven hours or more.

00:20

(Laughter)

00:23

In addition, men who routinely sleep just four to five hours a night

00:28

will have a level of testosterone

00:31

which is that of someone 10 years their senior.

00:36

So a lack of sleep will age a man by a decade

00:40

in terms of that critical aspect of wellness.

00:45

And we see equivalent impairments in female reproductive health

00:49

caused by a lack of sleep.

00:54

This is the best news that I have for you today.

00:57

(Laughter)

00:59

From this point, it may only get worse.

01:02

Not only will I tell you about the wonderfully good things

01:05

that happen when you get sleep,

01:07

but the alarmingly bad things that happen when you don't get enough,

01:11

both for your brain and for your body.

01:14

Let me start with the brain

01:17

and the functions of learning and memory,

01:20

because what we've discovered over the past 10 or so years

01:23

is that you need sleep after learning

01:26

to essentially hit the save button on those new memories

01:29

so that you don't forget.

01:32

But recently, we discovered that you also need sleep before learning

01:38

to actually prepare your brain,

01:41

almost like a dry sponge

01:43

ready to initially soak up new information.

01:46

And without sleep, the memory circuits of the brain

01:49

essentially become waterlogged, as it were,

01:52

and you can't absorb new memories.

01:55

So let me show you the data.

01:57

Here in this study, we decided to test the hypothesis

02:01

that pulling the all-nighter was a good idea.

02:05

So we took a group of individuals

02:08

and we assigned them to one of two experimental groups:

02:11

a sleep group and a sleep deprivation group.

02:15

Now the sleep group, they're going to get a full eight hours of slumber,

02:19

but the deprivation group, we're going to keep them awake

02:22

in the laboratory, under full supervision.

02:25

There's no naps or caffeine, by the way, so it's miserable for everyone involved.

02:30

And then the next day,

02:31

we're going to place those participants inside an MRI scanner

02:35

and we're going to have them try and learn a whole list of new facts

02:39

as we're taking snapshots of brain activity.

02:43

And then we're going to test them

02:45

to see how effective that learning has been.

02:48

And that's what you're looking at here on the vertical axis.

02:52

And when you put those two groups head to head,

02:54

what you find is a quite significant, 40-percent deficit

02:59

in the ability of the brain to make new memories without sleep.

03:04

I think this should be concerning,

03:06

considering what we know is happening to sleep

03:08

in our education populations right now.

03:12

In fact, to put that in context,

03:13

it would be the difference in a child acing an exam

03:17

versus failing it miserably -- 40 percent.

03:21

And we've gone on to discover what goes wrong within your brain

03:26

to produce these types of learning disabilities.

03:30

And there's a structure that sits

03:31

on the left and the right side of your brain, called the hippocampus.

03:36

And you can think of the hippocampus

03:38

almost like the informational inbox of your brain.

03:42

It's very good at receiving new memory files

03:45

and then holding on to them.

03:48

And when you look at this structure

03:50

in those people who'd had a full night of sleep,

03:53

we saw lots of healthy learning-related activity.

03:58

Yet in those people who were sleep-deprived,

04:01

we actually couldn't find any significant signal whatsoever.

04:06

So it's almost as though sleep deprivation had shut down your memory inbox,

04:11

and any new incoming files -- they were just being bounced.

04:15

You couldn't effectively commit new experiences to memory.

04:21

So that's the bad that can happen if I were to take sleep away from you,

04:26

but let me just come back to that control group for a second.

04:29

Do you remember those folks that got a full eight hours of sleep?

04:33

Well, we can ask a very different question:

04:36

What is it about the physiological quality of your sleep

04:40

when you do get it

04:41

that restores and enhances your memory and learning ability

04:45

each and every day?

04:47

And by placing electrodes all over the head,

04:50

what we've discovered is that there are big, powerful brainwaves

04:54

that happen during the very deepest stages of sleep

04:58

that have riding on top of them

05:00

these spectacular bursts of electrical activity

05:03

that we call sleep spindles.

05:06

And it's the combined quality of these deep-sleep brainwaves

05:11

that acts like a file-transfer mechanism at night,

05:15

shifting memories from a short-term vulnerable reservoir

05:19

to a more permanent long-term storage site within the brain,

05:23

and therefore protecting them, making them safe.

05:28

And it is important that we understand

05:31

what during sleep actually transacts these memory benefits,

05:36

because there are real medical and societal implications.

05:40

And let me just tell you about one area

05:42

that we've moved this work out into, clinically,

05:45

which is the context of aging and dementia.

05:50

Because it's of course no secret that, as we get older,

05:53

our learning and memory abilities begin to fade and decline.

05:58

But what we've also discovered

06:00

is that a physiological signature of aging is that your sleep gets worse,

06:07

especially that deep quality of sleep that I was just discussing.

06:12

And only last year, we finally published evidence

06:15

that these two things, they're not simply co-occurring,

06:18

they are significantly interrelated.

06:22

And it suggests that the disruption of deep sleep

06:25

is an underappreciated factor

06:27

that is contributing to cognitive decline or memory decline

06:31

in aging, and most recently we've discovered,

06:35

in Alzheimer's disease as well.

06:39

Now, I know this is remarkably depressing news.

06:43

It's in the mail. It's coming at you.

06:45

But there's a potential silver lining here.

06:49

Unlike many of the other factors that we know are associated with aging,

06:54

for example changes in the physical structure of the brain,

06:57

that's fiendishly difficult to treat.

07:00

But that sleep is a missing piece in the explanatory puzzle

07:05

of aging and Alzheimer's is exciting

07:08

because we may be able to do something about it.

07:12

And one way that we are approaching this at my sleep center

07:16

is not by using sleeping pills, by the way.

07:19

Unfortunately, they are blunt instruments that do not produce naturalistic sleep.

07:25

Instead, we're actually developing a method based on this.

07:28

It's called direct current brain stimulation.

07:31

You insert a small amount of voltage into the brain,

07:34

so small you typically don't feel it,

07:37

but it has a measurable impact.

07:40

Now if you apply this stimulation during sleep in young, healthy adults,

07:46

as if you're sort of singing in time with those deep-sleep brainwaves,

07:51

not only can you amplify the size of those deep-sleep brainwaves,

07:56

but in doing so, we can almost double the amount of memory benefit

08:00

that you get from sleep.

08:02

The question now is whether we can translate

08:05

this same affordable, potentially portable piece of technology

08:09

into older adults and those with dementia.

08:14

Can we restore back some healthy quality of deep sleep,

08:18

and in doing so, can we salvage aspects of their learning

08:23

and memory function?

08:25

That is my real hope now.

08:27

That's one of our moon-shot goals, as it were.

08:32

So that's an example of sleep for your brain,

08:36

but sleep is just as essential for your body.

08:40

We've already spoken about sleep loss and your reproductive system.

08:45

Or I could tell you about sleep loss and your cardiovascular system,

08:50

and that all it takes is one hour.

08:53

Because there is a global experiment performed on 1.6 billion people

08:58

across 70 countries twice a year,

09:03

and it's called daylight saving time.

09:06

Now, in the spring, when we lose one hour of sleep,

09:09

we see a subsequent 24-percent increase in heart attacks that following day.

09:18

In the autumn, when we gain an hour of sleep,

09:21

we see a 21-percent reduction in heart attacks.

09:27

Isn't that incredible?

09:30

And you see exactly the same profile for car crashes, road traffic accidents,

09:36

even suicide rates.

09:40

But as a deeper dive, I want to focus on this:

09:43

sleep loss and your immune system.

09:46

And here, I'll introduce these delightful blue elements in the image.

09:51

They are called natural killer cells,

09:54

and you can think of natural killer cells almost like the secret service agents

09:59

of your immune system.

10:01

They are very good at identifying dangerous, unwanted elements

10:06

and eliminating them.

10:08

In fact, what they're doing here is destroying a cancerous tumor mass.

10:14

So what you wish for is a virile set of these immune assassins

10:20

at all times,

10:22

and tragically, that's what you don't have if you're not sleeping enough.

10:27

So here in this experiment,

10:29

you're not going to have your sleep deprived for an entire night,

10:32

you're simply going to have your sleep restricted to four hours

10:36

for one single night,

10:38

and then we're going to look to see what's the percent reduction

10:41

in immune cell activity that you suffer.

10:44

And it's not small -- it's not 10 percent,

10:47

it's not 20 percent.

10:49

There was a 70-percent drop in natural killer cell activity.

10:55

That's a concerning state of immune deficiency,

11:00

and you can perhaps understand why we're now finding

11:03

significant links between short sleep duration

11:07

and your risk for the development of numerous forms of cancer.

11:13

Currently, that list includes cancer of the bowel,

11:16

cancer of the prostate and cancer of the breast.

11:21

In fact, the link between a lack of sleep and cancer is now so strong

11:26

that the World Health Organization

11:29

has classified any form of nighttime shift work

11:33

as a probable carcinogen,

11:36

because of a disruption of your sleep-wake rhythms.

11:41

So you may have heard of that old maxim

11:44

that you can sleep when you're dead.

11:46

Well, I'm being quite serious now --

11:48

it is mortally unwise advice.

11:51

We know this from epidemiological studies across millions of individuals.

11:56

There's a simple truth:

11:58

the shorter your sleep, the shorter your life.

12:02

Short sleep predicts all-cause mortality.

12:08

And if increasing your risk for the development of cancer

12:12

or even Alzheimer's disease

12:14

were not sufficiently disquieting,

12:19

we have since discovered that a lack of sleep will even erode

12:22

the very fabric of biological life itself,

12:28

your DNA genetic code.

12:31

So here in this study, they took a group of healthy adults

12:35

and they limited them to six hours of sleep a night

12:39

for one week,

12:40

and then they measured the change in their gene activity profile

12:44

relative to when those same individuals

12:47

were getting a full eight hours of sleep a night.

12:50

And there were two critical findings.

12:53

First, a sizable and significant 711 genes

12:58

were distorted in their activity,

13:01

caused by a lack of sleep.

13:03

The second result was that about half of those genes

13:06

were actually increased in their activity.

13:09

The other half were decreased.

13:11

Now those genes that were switched off by a lack of sleep

13:15

were genes associated with your immune system,

13:18

so once again, you can see that immune deficiency.

13:22

In contrast, those genes that were actually upregulated

13:25

or increased by way of a lack of sleep,

13:28

were genes associated with the promotion of tumors,

13:32

genes associated with long-term chronic inflammation within the body,

13:37

and genes associated with stress,

13:40

and, as a consequence, cardiovascular disease.

13:44

There is simply no aspect of your wellness

13:48

that can retreat at the sign of sleep deprivation

13:51

and get away unscathed.

13:54

It's rather like a broken water pipe in your home.

13:57

Sleep loss will leak down into every nook and cranny

14:01

of your physiology,

14:03

even tampering with the very DNA nucleic alphabet

14:07

that spells out your daily health narrative.

14:13

And at this point, you may be thinking,

14:16

"Oh my goodness, how do I start to get better sleep?

14:18

What are you tips for good sleep?"

14:21

Well, beyond avoiding the damaging and harmful impact

14:26

of alcohol and caffeine on sleep,

14:29

and if you're struggling with sleep at night,

14:31

avoiding naps during the day,

14:33

I have two pieces of advice for you.

14:36

The first is regularity.

14:39

Go to bed at the same time, wake up at the same time,

14:42

no matter whether it's the weekday or the weekend.

14:45

Regularity is king,

14:48

and it will anchor your sleep

14:50

and improve the quantity and the quality of that sleep.

14:55

The second is keep it cool.

14:59

Your body needs to drop its core temperature

15:02

by about two to three degrees Fahrenheit to initiate sleep

15:06

and then to stay asleep,

15:08

and it's the reason you will always find it easier

15:10

to fall asleep in a room that's too cold

15:13

than too hot.

15:15

So aim for a bedroom temperature of around 65 degrees,

15:19

or about 18 degrees Celsius.

15:21

That's going to be optimal for the sleep of most people.

15:25

And then finally, in taking a step back, then,

15:29

what is the mission-critical statement here?

15:34

Well, I think it may be this:

15:36

sleep, unfortunately, is not an optional lifestyle luxury.

15:42

Sleep is a nonnegotiable biological necessity.

15:48

It is your life-support system,

15:52

and it is Mother Nature's best effort yet at immortality.

15:58

And the decimation of sleep throughout industrialized nations

16:02

is having a catastrophic impact on our health, our wellness,

16:08

even the safety and the education of our children.

16:11

It's a silent sleep loss epidemic,

16:14

and it's fast becoming one of the greatest public health challenges

16:18

that we face in the 21st century.

16:23

I believe it is now time for us to reclaim our right

16:28

to a full night of sleep,

16:31

and without embarrassment

16:33

or that unfortunate stigma of laziness.

16:38

And in doing so, we can be reunited with the most powerful elixir of life,

16:45

the Swiss Army knife of health, as it were.

16:50

And with that soapbox rant over,

16:52

I will simply say, good night, good luck,

16:54

and above all ...

16:58

I do hope you sleep well.

17:00

Thank you very much indeed.

17:01

(Applause)

17:06

Thank you.

17:07

(Applause)

17:10

Thank you so much.

17:11

David Biello: No, no, no. Stay there for a second.

17:14

Good job not running away, though. I appreciate that.

17:17

So that was terrifying.

17:18

Matt Walker: You're welcome. DB: Yes, thank you, thank you.

17:21

Since we can't catch up on sleep, what are we supposed to do?

17:27

What do we do when we're, like, tossing and turning in bed late at night

17:30

or doing shift work or whatever else?

17:33

MW: So you're right, we can't catch up on sleep.

17:36

Sleep is not like the bank.

17:37

You can't accumulate a debt

17:39

and then hope to pay it off at a later point in time.

17:42

I should also note the reason that it's so catastrophic

17:45

and that our health deteriorates so quickly,

17:48

first, it's because human beings are the only species

17:51

that deliberately deprive themselves of sleep

17:53

for no apparent reason.

17:56

DB: Because we're smart.

17:57

MW: And I make that point because it means that Mother Nature,

18:02

throughout the course of evolution,

18:03

has never had to face the challenge of this thing called sleep deprivation.

18:08

So she's never developed a safety net,

18:12

and that's why when you undersleep,

18:14

things just sort of implode so quickly, both within the brain and the body.

18:18

So you just have to prioritize.

18:21

DB: OK, but tossing and turning in bed,

18:24

what do I do?

18:26

MW: So if you are staying in bed awake for too long,

18:30

you should get out of bed and go to a different room

18:34

and do something different.

18:35

The reason is because your brain will very quickly associate your bedroom

18:39

with the place of wakefulness,

18:42

and you need to break that association.

18:44

So only return to bed when you are sleepy,

18:47

and that way you will relearn the association that you once had,

18:51

which is your bed is the place of sleep.

18:53

So the analogy would be,

18:55

you'd never sit at the dinner table, waiting to get hungry,

18:59

so why would you lie in bed, waiting to get sleepy?

19:03

DB: Well, thank you for that wake-up call.

19:05

Great job, Matt.

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