Often, when I'm reviewing stories about neuroscience that can help entrepreneurs train their brains to improve health and performance, there's a moment at the end where the researchers caution about the limits of their work.
- Sometimes, it's a caveat walking back an extra conclusion people might be inclined to make.
- Sometimes, it's a wistful or wondrous note about areas in which more research should be done.
- Often, it's a reminder not to get too far ahead of ourselves because of our old friend, correlation versus causation.
But
very occasionally, I come across something that offers even more useful
insights as we work backward, inspiring you to read previous research
that shows how neuroscience suggests people might be able to improve
their health.
That's what happened
recently, and it has to do with studies about quality sleep, its
biological purpose, and, frankly, the lack of quality sleep that many
entrepreneurs and business leaders still report.
Let's go to the research that sparked this exploration.
Writing in the peer-reviewed journal Translational Neurodegeneration,
university researchers in Australia explained that they set out to
study devastating motor neuron diseases like amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.
There's
no known cure for ALS, and the researchers wanted to determine whether
impairment of the body's glymphatic system, which removes waste from the
brain, might be associated with onset of the disease to begin with.
To
understand their experiment, we first have to understand a little bit
about how our bodies process protein, and how the glymphatic system
works.
As the researchers explained,
our bodies rely on long chains of proteins, each made up of amino
acids, which align "to perform specific tasks like creating antibodies
to fight off infection, supporting cells or transporting molecules."
When
things don't work correctly, the body can accumulate "misfolded
proteins." It's the glymphatic system that removes this kind of waste
from the brain, working mostly while we sleep.
So,
the researchers' study involved mice that had been genetically modified
to express a human protein that is seen in human patients with ALS.
When they fed the mice food that had been laced with an antibiotic that
counteracted the human protein, they aged normally.
But when they fed the mice food without
antibiotics, and the modified human proteins accumulated, the mice
began to show "classical signs of ALS including progressive muscle
impairments and brain atrophy."
From
there, they used an MRI to look at the mice's brain structures, and
they found that in the mice with the human protein unobscured,
glymphatic clearance was significantly less effective than in the mice
that had not been genetically modified.
Other contributors to glymphatic clearance, which the study authors cite based on previous research, include:
- consumption of Omega-3 fatty acids, which are found in marine-based fish;
- moderate alcohol consumption (the emphasis is on moderate; high doses of alcohol had the opposite effect);
- exercise; and
- sleeping on your side.
It's
that last extra contributor that leaped out. Sure enough, there's a
whole body of research on mice, glymphatic clearance, and sleep that
suggests that sleeping on one's side, rather than face-down or on your
back, can increase the brain-cleaning function of glymphatic clearance.
"The reasons for this are not yet fully understood," wrote study author David Wright, "but possibly relates to the effects of gravity, compression and stretching of tissue."
So,
where does all this leave you? Certainly, I hope you never have to
contend personally with motor neuron diseases. But, I also hear
constantly from entrepreneurs that they're interested in easy,
science-backed life hacks that can improve their productivity and their
health.
Here, it seems that a
simple habit like learning to sleep on your side might offer tangible
benefits. It might be even easier than you might suspect; I came across
several studies suggesting a majority of people sleep on their sides
automatically, anyway.
Now, maybe you're already familiar with this earlier study, but just in case your subscription to the Journal of Neuroscience has lapsed, it's worth revisiting.
"Lateral
sleep position is already the most popular in human and most animals,"
one of the authors of that study wrote, adding that "a distinct
biological function of sleep and that is to 'clean up' the mess that
accumulates while we are awake."
Anyway, as I write in my free e-book Neuroscience: 13 Ways to Understand and Train Your Brain for Life, there's nothing more fascinating than the human brain, and the unexpected ways in which it works.
Sleep health is always at the top of the list. And that counts no matter how you come to find the insights.
Thanks a lot, I have always slept on my stomach. Surely sleeping the way that gives you, personally, a good night's sleep is equally important as your posture when you sleep?
ReplyDeleteDepends on whether you believe this science and want the benefits from it.
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