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Morning
Exercise May Make Sleep Easier
Older women who often have trouble sleeping
may want to consider a little workout in the morning for a better
rest at night.
Morning exercisers had fewer complaints
about a bad night's sleep and those who stretched in the morning
had somewhat better sleep, a new study found. Women who exercise
in the evening, on the other hand, were more likely to be up at
night.
The women didn't need much morning
activity to get the benefit. "It's like doing a brisk walk," said
researcher Anne McTiernan. "Nobody is saying people have to be
athletes and do marathons."
The scientists at Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center in Seattle drew their data from a larger
study of the effects of exercise in reducing the risk of breast
cancer. Because the study included survey questions on sleep,
the researchers could examine an issue that was not part of the
original project. McTiernan is principal investigator of the cancer
study as well as senior researcher on the sleep project, whose
findings were published in the November issue of the journal Sleep.
Women in the sleep study were cancer-free
and postmenopausal, ages 50 to 75, overweight or obese, and not
exercising at the start of the project. Eighty-seven were placed
in the exercise program and 86 in the stretching program. Both
groups were followed for a year. Researchers compared how well
the women reported sleeping before the study started and afterward.
Women in the exercise program did
at least 45 minutes of moderate walking or riding an exercise
bike five days a week at an exercise facility or on their own.
Those who were stretching did an hour once a week under the supervision
of an exercise physiologist, and stretched 15 to 30 minutes three
times a week on their own. Fifty-five percent of all the women
did their activity in the morning.
Although the exercise program was
about 15 minutes a day more than federal officials recommend as
the minimum for healthful exercise, it's still not a lot, McTiernan
said. The heart rates of the exercisers were no higher than they
would get in a brisk walk, she said.
How the women did in their programs
was compared with their ratings of their ability to sleep, including
whether they used sleep aids such as pills or alcohol, whether
they felt they were sleeping soundly and through the night, and
whether they fell asleep during quiet activities.
Women who exercised averaged 70
percent better sleep and women who stretched averaged 30 percent
better sleep, the study found.
The study did not look for reasons
why exercise in the morning was good for a night's rest while
exercise at night was not, or why stretching would help at all.
The researchers suspect that exercise
in the morning might set the women's body clocks for a day of
activity and a night of sleep, while exercise at night might push
back the sleep part of the sleep-wake cycle. They speculate that
the stretches might have improved sleep by making the women more
flexible and relaxed.
Exercise also increases activity
hormones and creates lactic acid as a byproduct, and both can
make a body more restless, said Edward Stepanski, director of
the Sleep Disorders Service and Research Center at Rush University
Medical Center in Chicago. Similarly, exercise raises temperature,
while sleep requires a slight drop in temperature, said Stepanski,
who was not part of the Fred Hutchinson study.
As for why exercise might be better
in morning, Stepanski also suspects a change in circadian rhythm.
Finding out whether morning exercise benefits the body clock would
be an interesting follow-up study, he said.
Reference
Source 102
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