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Bad Sleep? Work Out ASAP to Avoid Side Effects, Says Study

When it comes to balancing the many factors that affect your health and fitness, small mistakes can really tip the scales. This is particularly true for lost sleep; missing out on shut-eye can grind your gains to a halt.

A single-digit decrease might not sound like much. However, if the study’s findings hold (and they do, we’ll get to that), your 225-pound bench press max could fall to 210 in the blink of an eye.

Here’s the good news: Hitting the gym first thing in the morning might stave off these negative effects, at least partly.

Sleep Loss & Exercise Performance: Science Explained

The paper in question is titled “Effects of Acute Sleep Loss on Physical Performance: A Systematic and Meta-Analytical Review,” by authors Craven et al. In case you aren’t aware, a meta analysis is essentially a study of studies.

A fit person performing the barbell bench press exercise.
Credit: Vladimir Sukhachev / Shutterstock

Craven & colleagues collected and analyzed 69 existing studies that met their inclusion criteria:

Here’s what they found.

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Findings

“Results indicated a negative impact of sleep loss on the percentage change in exercise performance,” the authors wrote. Chiefly, researchers found a 7.5% decrease in exercise performance resulting from six or fewer hours of shut-eye. Additionally…

One big thing: The authors alleged that, following a night of interrupted or deprived sleep, you can expect a .5% decrease in performance for every hour you’re awake. This backs the authors’ finding that afternoon or evening workouts take a bigger hit than morning workouts if you sleep poorly.

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Limitations

This study, while comprehensive, does not paint a full picture of how sleep deprivation affects your gym game. Notably, the authors remarked on having no intention to investigate the mechanisms behind performance losses; they set out to observe the impacts alone. Further…

Credit: Fabio Principe / Shutterstock

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What You Should Do

We all know that sleep can make or break your fitness routine. Habitual sleep deprivation harms more than your workout-to-workout performance. It’s associated with muscle loss and can also impede the rate at which you lose body fat. (2)(3)

That said, bad nights happen. If you tossed and turned the night prior to an important workout, you might be able to mitigate some of the negative performance effects by hitting the gym in the morning, rather than later in the day.

More Research Content

References

  1. Craven, J., McCartney, D., Desbrow, B., Sabapathy, S., Bellinger, P., Roberts, L., & Irwin, C. (2022). Effects of Acute Sleep Loss on Physical Performance: A Systematic and Meta-Analytical Review. Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)52(11), 2669–2690.
  2. Lamon S, Morabito A, Arentson-Lantz E, Knowles O, Vincent GE, Condo D, Alexander SE, Garnham A, Paddon-Jones D, Aisbett B. The effect of acute sleep deprivation on skeletal muscle protein synthesis and the hormonal environment. Physiol Rep. 2021 Jan;9(1):e14660. doi: 10.14814/phy2.14660. PMID: 33400856; PMCID: PMC7785053.
  3. Nedeltcheva AV, Kilkus JM, Imperial J, Schoeller DA, Penev PD. Insufficient sleep undermines dietary efforts to reduce adiposity. Ann Intern Med. 2010 Oct 5;153(7):435-41. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-153-7-201010050-00006. PMID: 20921542; PMCID: PMC2951287.

Featured Image: Yuri A. / Shutterstock

The post Bad Sleep? Work Out ASAP to Avoid Side Effects, Says Study appeared first on BarBend.

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