The Extreme Sleep Scientist: The Painful Trick To Fix Insomnia And Poor Sleep!
概要
TLDRThe discussion delves into the intricacies of sleep and its disorders, led by Dr. Guy Leschziner, a prominent neurologist and sleep expert. Highlighted is the perplexing case of Kenneth Parks, who committed murder and assault while allegedly sleepwalking and was later acquitted. The conversation touches on a wide array of sleep concerns such as insomnia, sleep apnea, and the neurological factors influencing sleep behavior. Dr. Leschziner emphasizes the prevalence of sleep disorders, noting that a significant portion of the population suffers from chronic sleep deprivation and conditions like sleep apnea, often underdiagnosed. He outlines the impact of sleep on various health aspects, from weight gain to cardiovascular and mental health issues, underscoring the critical necessity of sleep for overall well-being. The discussion also explores the cultural attitudes towards sleep, the role of sleep aids and methods like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBTI), and the debate over the complexities of sleep tracking technology. Additionally, the conversation considers philosophical queries on free will and morality tied to neurological conditions and their effects on behavior. Dr. Leschziner’s insights provide a comprehensive view on understanding and improving sleep health.
収穫
- 🛌 Chronic sleep deprivation affects 20% of adults.
- 😴 Insomnia affects 30% of people annually, with effective treatment available.
- 🚗 Cases exist where crimes were committed while sleepwalking.
- 🔍 Sleep is crucial for cognitive and physical health.
- 🔗 Sleep deprivation is linked to weight gain and diet shifts.
- 🛠️ Non-medication treatments like CBTI can effectively treat insomnia.
- 💤 The glymphatic system in the brain clears toxins during sleep.
- 🧠 Local sleep deprivation can cause parts of the brain to 'sleep' during waking hours.
- 💡 Exposing yourself to too much blue light from screens affects sleep patterns.
- 👨⚕️ Sleep medicine is increasingly recognized for its importance in overall health.
- 📉 Sleep tracking can increase anxiety in those already worried about their sleep.
- 🎭 Our understanding of sleep and its disorders is still evolving.
タイムライン
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The video begins with a discussion on sleepwalking and its implications, highlighting the case of Kenneth Parks, who was acquitted after committing crimes in his sleep. The speaker introduces Dr. Guy Leschziner, a neurologist specializing in sleep medicine, and discusses widespread chronic sleep deprivation, insomnia, and sleep apnea in the UK.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Dr. Leschziner explains what constitutes healthy sleep and the mortality risks associated with too much sleep. He indicates that even a single night of sleep deprivation can lead to increased calorie intake, and mentions effective treatments for insomnia. He is generally not in favor of sleep tablets, preferring non-drug-based techniques for insomnia.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The channel announces a subscriber raffle giveaway to thank viewers for helping them reach 6 million subscribers. The speaker then transitions back to the interview with Dr. Leschziner, asking about his personal curiosity and career motivations related to understanding the brain and extreme human experiences.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Dr. Leschziner discusses his fascination with the brain and neurological extremes. He describes neurology as the study of brain diseases like epilepsy and Parkinson's and explains sleep medicine's emergence as a field. His work bridges sleep disorders with broader neurological conditions, which often significantly alter perception and behavior.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Dr. Leschziner describes his work at one of Europe's large sleep disorder centers, where extensive studies on sleep disorders like sleep apnea and narcolepsy are conducted. He emphasizes the large number of patients treated and discusses the overlap between sleep and neurological issues, underscoring sleep's fundamental biological role.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
The discussion explores why humans require sleep and the evolutionary significance, noting how certain animals' sleep adaptations underscore its importance. Sleep's role extends across our immune, cardiovascular, and mental health systems. The conversation touches on societal changes in sleep perception and historical patterns of sleep.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Dr. Leschziner explains how societal factors, such as lifestyle and technology, contribute to widespread sleep issues, highlighting insomnia and sleep apnea. There's a deep dive into statistics showing the prevalence of these conditions and the underdiagnosis of sleep apnea, especially in the UK.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
The speaker discusses the prevalence of various common and serious sleep disorders and asserts that most sleep issues can be improved significantly. Treatments like cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTI) show high success rates, suggesting a large percentage of individuals can recover to healthy sleep patterns.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
It's noted that some modern lifestyle factors exacerbate sleep disorders, with studies showing that traditional societies experience less insomnia. Researchers have studied these societies to understand natural sleep patterns, finding fewer instances of insomnia and some differences in sleep cycles compared to industrialized societies.
- 00:45:00 - 01:58:56
Dr. Leschziner discusses how normal wakefulness during sleep cycles is not pathological. He mentions a medieval hypothesis of segmented sleep and how modern sleeping patterns differ geographically, stressing the non-uniformity of human sleep needs,
マインドマップ
よくある質問
Who is Dr. Guy Leschziner?
Dr. Guy Leschziner is a neurologist specializing in sleep medicine at one of Europe's largest sleep clinics.
What happened to Kenneth Parks?
Kenneth Parks drove 23 kilometers, killed his mother-in-law, and attacked his father-in-law while sleepwalking. He was acquitted because of his sleepwalking defense.
How prevalent is sleep deprivation?
About 20% of the adult population is chronically sleep deprived.
What is sleep apnea?
Sleep apnea is a condition where a person's airway narrows during sleep, causing breathing difficulties and disturbances in sleep.
Can sleep disorders lead to criminal behavior?
Yes, there have been cases where individuals have committed crimes while sleepwalking.
How important is sleep?
Sleep is fundamental, affecting cognitive function, immune health, and even emotional well-being.
What is the link between sleep deprivation and weight gain?
Sleep deprivation can lead to increased calorie intake and altered processing of food due to hormonal changes.
What can help treat insomnia?
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBTI) is considered the gold standard treatment.
Why do we dream?
The exact reason we dream is not fully understood, but it's suggested to help with memory and emotional processing.
What's the role of the glymphatic system in sleep?
The glymphatic system helps clear metabolites and toxins, like beta-amyloid, from the brain during sleep.
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- 00:00:00I've seen patients cooking a meal in
- 00:00:01their sleep driven in their sleep
- 00:00:03committed crimes in their sleep so what
- 00:00:06is the story of Kenneth Parks he drove
- 00:00:09several miles to his in-law's house
- 00:00:11bludgeoned his mother-in-law to death
- 00:00:13and then tried to kill his father-in-law
- 00:00:16but it was deemed he was sleepwalking
- 00:00:18and he was actually acquitted that's
- 00:00:21crazy Dr guy leser is a leading
- 00:00:23neurologist in sleep physician at one of
- 00:00:24Europe's largest Leep clinics and with
- 00:00:26over 25,000 studies of over 100,000
- 00:00:30patients his pioneering research and
- 00:00:31sleep medicine has provided the answers
- 00:00:33we need to improve our sleep so many
- 00:00:36people are chronically sleep deprived
- 00:00:3830% will experience insomnia and 80% of
- 00:00:41people in the UK don't know that they've
- 00:00:43got sleep annea this is the problem but
- 00:00:45the majority can be helped so let's get
- 00:00:47into that is there such a thing as
- 00:00:50healthy sleep somewhere between 7 and 8
- 00:00:52and 1 half hours a night now what's
- 00:00:54difficult to explain is why your Ora
- 00:00:56mortality goes up if you're sleeping
- 00:00:58more than 8 and 1 half hours is there a
- 00:01:00link between sleep deprivation and
- 00:01:02weight gain increases so even a single
- 00:01:04night of sleep deprivation can result in
- 00:01:06a dramatic increase in calorie intake
- 00:01:08and that's because what hope would you
- 00:01:10offer insomniacs there are very
- 00:01:12effective treatments for insomnia for
- 00:01:14example if you we know that helps about
- 00:01:1780% of individuals are you a fan of
- 00:01:20sleep tablets as a general r no because
- 00:01:22there are many non-d drug-based
- 00:01:23techniques what are these techniques to
- 00:01:25improve our sleep the gold standard
- 00:01:27treatment now is
- 00:01:30guy why do we dream that's a really
- 00:01:33important question the honest answer
- 00:01:36is we've just hit 6 million subscribers
- 00:01:38on the DI of a SE um so me and my team
- 00:01:41would like to do something we've never
- 00:01:42done before as little thank you and
- 00:01:43we're calling it The dire of a SEO
- 00:01:45subscriber raffle and here is how it
- 00:01:47works every episode this month we're
- 00:01:49going to pick three current subscribers
- 00:01:50at random and we'll send one of you a
- 00:01:521,000 voucher one of you tickets to come
- 00:01:55and watch the D SE behind the scenes
- 00:01:57live with our team and one of you will
- 00:01:58have a 10-minute phone call with me to
- 00:02:00discuss whatever you want to talk about
- 00:02:02if you're a subscriber you're in the
- 00:02:04raffle thank you from the bottom of my
- 00:02:07heart for allowing me to do something
- 00:02:08that me and my team love doing so much
- 00:02:10it is the greatest honor of my lifetime
- 00:02:12and I hope it I hope it continues uh off
- 00:02:14into the Future Let's get to the
- 00:02:16[Music]
- 00:02:19episode
- 00:02:21guy should I say doct
- 00:02:23guy what is it that is at the very sort
- 00:02:26of heart of your personal curiosity
- 00:02:29because as I look at your work and how
- 00:02:31what you've committed your career to
- 00:02:32there seems to be a bit of a through
- 00:02:34line as to sort of the subject matters
- 00:02:36that have captured
- 00:02:37you so I've always been fascinated why
- 00:02:41we are the way that we are and obviously
- 00:02:43from a scientific perspective the core
- 00:02:46of that is our brain and in the course
- 00:02:49of my clinical practice I come across a
- 00:02:52a whole host of individuals who really
- 00:02:54sit at the extremes of The Human
- 00:02:57Experience you know people who are
- 00:02:59sometimes afflicted by very serious
- 00:03:02neurological conditions who experience
- 00:03:04the world in a very different way to how
- 00:03:06we do so really the the at the core of
- 00:03:09what I do particularly in the public
- 00:03:11facing work that I do it's looking at
- 00:03:14those people at the extremes of The
- 00:03:16Human Experience and trying to work out
- 00:03:18what it tells us about all of us about
- 00:03:20how we all work when you say the
- 00:03:22extremes of The Human Experience what
- 00:03:24does what does that mean so individuals
- 00:03:26who have who see the world in a very
- 00:03:29different way experience the world in a
- 00:03:30very different way understand the world
- 00:03:33in a very different way so you know from
- 00:03:36when it comes to individuals who have
- 00:03:38very extreme Sleep Disorders to
- 00:03:40individuals in whom their perception of
- 00:03:43reality is very different from our own
- 00:03:45or to people who behave in a very
- 00:03:47different way so when it comes to things
- 00:03:50like uh aggression or um the way their
- 00:03:55relationship with food or um their
- 00:03:58personality traits I think in in every
- 00:04:01area of clinical neurology you see
- 00:04:04individuals in whom something has
- 00:04:06happened to their brain that
- 00:04:08fundamentally changes the way they see
- 00:04:11the world interpret the world or behave
- 00:04:13within that world and what's your sort
- 00:04:16of day-to-day and and if you if I was to
- 00:04:19take a look at your CV what would I see
- 00:04:20on your CV I uh studied medicine at
- 00:04:23Oxford and then at Imperial uh and very
- 00:04:26early on in my career started training
- 00:04:28in the world of Neurology did a PhD at
- 00:04:31Imperial in Cambridge what is neurology
- 00:04:34neurology is the clinical study of the
- 00:04:37brain so the brain in its disease state
- 00:04:41so we see individuals with epilepsy with
- 00:04:44Parkinson's disease with nerve problems
- 00:04:48um with certain types of sleep disorders
- 00:04:51basically any disease or disorder that
- 00:04:53influences how the brain and the nervous
- 00:04:55system works so I did a PhD at Imperial
- 00:05:00and Cambridge looking at the genetics of
- 00:05:02epilepsy and then started working uh as
- 00:05:05an NHS consultant in
- 00:05:082010 and you're a consultant of neur um
- 00:05:12neurology and sleep medicine that's
- 00:05:15right yeah I've never heard the phrase
- 00:05:17sleep medicine before well sleep
- 00:05:18medicine has been around for a long time
- 00:05:21um I was very lucky in the early on in
- 00:05:24my training period I rotated through a
- 00:05:26hospital where one of my now colleagues
- 00:05:29had come from the United States he'd
- 00:05:32been based in La where sleep medicine
- 00:05:34was really starting out and he'd set up
- 00:05:37a a sleep medicine unit and that was at
- 00:05:40St Thomas's Hospital in London opposite
- 00:05:41the house of parliament um and certainly
- 00:05:44over the last 20 or 30 years this been a
- 00:05:47really exploding area of uh of medicine
- 00:05:51uh partly mirrored by the fact that we
- 00:05:54are much more aware of the impact of
- 00:05:56sleep on a range of biological and U
- 00:06:01mental health issues um but actually in
- 00:06:05the world of Neurology there are many
- 00:06:07sleep disorders that have their basis in
- 00:06:09the brain conditions like narpy like
- 00:06:12people who Sleepwalk or act out their
- 00:06:14dreams people who have uh episodes at
- 00:06:17night that may or may not reflect
- 00:06:20certain types of epilepsy so that's
- 00:06:22really the primary focus of my work now
- 00:06:26between 2013 and 2023 you ran gu St
- 00:06:29Thomas's Hospital Sleep Disorder Center
- 00:06:31that's right yeah what is that so the
- 00:06:34the Sleep Disorder Center is probably
- 00:06:36one of the largest sleep disorder
- 00:06:37centers in Europe actually so we have 10
- 00:06:41inpatient beds so every night 10 people
- 00:06:45are brought into the Sleep laboratory
- 00:06:48and we study their sleep it's got uh now
- 00:06:51about 15 Consultants that's got a staff
- 00:06:54of about 50 people and we see a range of
- 00:06:57people with conditions like sleep apnea
- 00:07:01which is where people stop breathing at
- 00:07:02night and then some of the conditions
- 00:07:04that I I've talked about conditions like
- 00:07:06restless leg syndrome extreme
- 00:07:08sleepwalking narcolepsy and other
- 00:07:10related issues how many patients have
- 00:07:13you had in your sleep disorder Center
- 00:07:16that you've studied gosh uh an awful lot
- 00:07:18so we do about
- 00:07:202,500 sleep studies a year and we've
- 00:07:24been going for well a long time sort of
- 00:07:2715 20 years so every year we see about
- 00:07:31uh 10,000 patients in total so very very
- 00:07:34large numbers if you had to estimate how
- 00:07:37many you've seen I I I would imagine
- 00:07:40somewhere in the region of upward of
- 00:07:42100,000 if we're talking about 10,000
- 00:07:44patients a year and and how many sleep
- 00:07:47studies have you conducted in that
- 00:07:49Center so we've been at the current site
- 00:07:52with 10 beds for about 10 years mhm um
- 00:07:56and so we're probably talking about 25
- 00:07:595,000 studies why sleep of all the
- 00:08:02things that you could commit so much of
- 00:08:03your time to because it appears you've
- 00:08:05been really thinking and working on the
- 00:08:06subject matter of sleep for about sort
- 00:08:0820 OD years two decades roughly yeah
- 00:08:10something like that yeah what why well I
- 00:08:13think the first thing is is that um we
- 00:08:16spend a third of Our Lives doing it and
- 00:08:19yet we whatever people like me will tell
- 00:08:22you we still understand relatively
- 00:08:25little about it we understand relatively
- 00:08:27little about you know what it's for
- 00:08:30um what it does to our biology obviously
- 00:08:32that's changing very very quickly now um
- 00:08:36it's uh it has a great deal of overlap
- 00:08:39with the world of clinical neurology so
- 00:08:41I also do uh I do Specialist Clinic
- 00:08:44specialist clinics in epilepsy and I do
- 00:08:46specialist uh clinics in in general
- 00:08:49neurology so and and sleep and the Brain
- 00:08:52intersect every single level of course
- 00:08:55you know it's not me saying this but a
- 00:08:56famous statement is sleep is of the
- 00:08:59brain by the brain and for the brain
- 00:09:01it's in intimately linked to every
- 00:09:03aspect of how our brain works so one of
- 00:09:06the really exciting things is that
- 00:09:08because it's a relatively new area our
- 00:09:10understanding of it is exploding in ways
- 00:09:14that are not paralleled across other
- 00:09:17areas of clinical
- 00:09:19medicine is it important is it important
- 00:09:22yeah um I I think it is of fundamental
- 00:09:26importance you know the fact is that if
- 00:09:28sleep wasn't important it would be a
- 00:09:30very stupid thing for evolution to
- 00:09:34create in us the fact that we are
- 00:09:36essentially SL Switched Off from our
- 00:09:38external environment for a third of our
- 00:09:40lives and actually there's a whole host
- 00:09:42of evidence when you look at how um
- 00:09:45certain animals have developed the
- 00:09:46ability to be able to sleep with only
- 00:09:48half their brain at a time you know
- 00:09:50animals like aquatic mammals or certain
- 00:09:52Birds dolphin and dolphins that very
- 00:09:55much suggests well you know that must be
- 00:09:58of great importance if it's if sleep is
- 00:10:02um a risk for our survival because if
- 00:10:05you're an aquatic mamal like a dolphin
- 00:10:07and you're sleeping and you're unable to
- 00:10:09surface or unable to see what predators
- 00:10:11are around you that the that the the
- 00:10:14evolution has designed a system whereby
- 00:10:17it enables you to sleep with half of
- 00:10:18your brain at a time so that in and of
- 00:10:21itself tells us it's important the the
- 00:10:24the the fact that the Circadian rhythm
- 00:10:26so that 24-hour cycle that a whole host
- 00:10:29of biological rhythms have is so
- 00:10:33intrinsically linked to life itself that
- 00:10:36actually every single um life form
- 00:10:40exhibits features of this 24-hour
- 00:10:42circadian rhythm tells us that this was
- 00:10:44something that was prioritized at a very
- 00:10:47very early stage in life's Evolution on
- 00:10:49Earth so yes it's important and over the
- 00:10:53last few years we've understand
- 00:10:55understood precisely why it's important
- 00:10:57I say precisely but we know that it's
- 00:11:00important for pretty much every aspect
- 00:11:02of our waking lives be it our immune
- 00:11:04system be it our um cardiovascular
- 00:11:07system or blood pressure risk of
- 00:11:10diabetes um mental health so depression
- 00:11:14and anxiety even how we perceive pain so
- 00:11:17it really is fundamental to every system
- 00:11:20that we uh rely on during our waking
- 00:11:23Lives having seen you know thousands and
- 00:11:26thousands and thousands of people that
- 00:11:27struggle with sleep that have been sent
- 00:11:29to your Center do you think the the
- 00:11:32average person on the
- 00:11:33street over or underestimates the
- 00:11:36importance of sleep in their day-to-day
- 00:11:37life well I think it's changing I think
- 00:11:39it was not that long ago where you know
- 00:11:42comments like sleep is for wimps uh Was
- 00:11:45Heard fairly frequently and that there
- 00:11:47were some bragging rights associated
- 00:11:49with how little you sleep I think that
- 00:11:51there has been a transformation over the
- 00:11:53last sort of 15 or 20 years whereby
- 00:11:56people have become much more aware of
- 00:11:59how important sleep a sleep is and have
- 00:12:01started prioritizing it a little bit so
- 00:12:04you think where do you think we stand
- 00:12:06then overestimate underestimate I think
- 00:12:08that there is still in the general
- 00:12:09population an underestimation of how
- 00:12:11important sleep is but I think there are
- 00:12:13certain uh segments of the population
- 00:12:16that are much more aware of it and
- 00:12:19perhaps even dare I say overestimate it
- 00:12:22overestimate it yes I think so I I think
- 00:12:24that there is a danger at the current
- 00:12:26time that we tend to obsessional IE
- 00:12:30about sleep and um and think that it is
- 00:12:33the the the be all and end all it's of
- 00:12:35course part of normal life for our sleep
- 00:12:38to fluctuate depending on what's going
- 00:12:40on in our external and our internal
- 00:12:43lives and I think the danger is that if
- 00:12:45you overemphasize the important of
- 00:12:48importance of getting eight or eight and
- 00:12:49a half hours sleep every night then you
- 00:12:53actually uh risk problems later down the
- 00:12:56line exacerbating things like insomnia
- 00:12:59can you give me an overview of the
- 00:13:01current state of sleep in terms of the
- 00:13:04percentages stats of people that are
- 00:13:06struggling with their sleep the variety
- 00:13:08of ways that we struggle with our sleep
- 00:13:10the different disorders associated with
- 00:13:11with our sleep and just like a breakdown
- 00:13:13of society at large is current sleep
- 00:13:16health so we think that about 20% of the
- 00:13:20adult population are chronically sleep
- 00:13:22deprived so that they are not sleeping
- 00:13:24enough and that's largely as a result of
- 00:13:27Lifestyle factors and lack of
- 00:13:29prioritization of sleep we think we know
- 00:13:32that about 30% of the adult population
- 00:13:35in any one year will experience a period
- 00:13:37of insomnia so insomnia is different
- 00:13:39from chronic sleep deprivation insomnia
- 00:13:41is the the state whereby you want to
- 00:13:45sleep where you're lying in bed and you
- 00:13:48can't sleep which is very different from
- 00:13:50you know burning the candle at both ends
- 00:13:52and about 10% of the adult population
- 00:13:55will have chronic insomnia so that's an
- 00:13:57ongoing issue with
- 00:13:59not being able to sleep for more than 3
- 00:14:02months at a time so you know very very
- 00:14:05high numbers there are some other sleep
- 00:14:07disorders that are incredibly common so
- 00:14:09a condition called obstructive sleep
- 00:14:12apnea which is essentially a part of the
- 00:14:15spectrum of of snoring but in
- 00:14:17obstructive sleep apnea your Airway
- 00:14:19Narrows uh you have difficulty breathing
- 00:14:22it partially obstructs and you have
- 00:14:24recurrent brief Awakenings sometimes
- 00:14:26that you're not aware of that disrupt
- 00:14:28your sleep
- 00:14:29and estimates were vary wildly depending
- 00:14:32on where in the world that they've been
- 00:14:33done but I think you know our best guess
- 00:14:36is something like 10 to 12% of adult
- 00:14:39males experience sleep apnea clinically
- 00:14:42significant sleep apnea and somewhere in
- 00:14:44the region of about 6% of of women
- 00:14:47experience clinically significant sleep
- 00:14:49apnea so we're talking about very very
- 00:14:50large numbers and the majority of
- 00:14:53individuals with sleep apne are
- 00:14:54undiagnosed so it's estimated that about
- 00:14:5780% of people in the UK with with sleep
- 00:14:59apnea don't know that they've got sleep
- 00:15:01apnea and I've never seen anybody about
- 00:15:03sleep apnea there are other conditions
- 00:15:05like um restless leg syndrome which is a
- 00:15:08neurological disorder whereby people
- 00:15:11experience an urge to move a fidgetiness
- 00:15:15in their usually their legs although it
- 00:15:17can affect other body parts as well um
- 00:15:19that can give rise to very huge
- 00:15:21difficulties getting off to sleep and
- 00:15:23actually staying asleep because a lot of
- 00:15:25these individuals kick at night when
- 00:15:27they are asleep and kick themselves
- 00:15:29awake and that probably affects
- 00:15:31somewhere in the region of about 5% of
- 00:15:33the adult population even sleepwalking 1
- 00:15:36to 2% of the population so lots and lots
- 00:15:39of these conditions very very
- 00:15:41common how many of the people that walk
- 00:15:44in your sleep center do you think could
- 00:15:47be helped and could you help well I
- 00:15:50think the majority can be helped um a
- 00:15:53cure is something different but the
- 00:15:55majority can be helped in some shape or
- 00:15:57form and if and if we talk about getting
- 00:16:00someone that has walked in your clinic
- 00:16:02with some kind of sleep disorder to a
- 00:16:03state where they are a healthy sleeper
- 00:16:05what kind of percentage do you think
- 00:16:08well I think it's important to to
- 00:16:10precede what I say by the fact that
- 00:16:11actually we don't see many people with
- 00:16:14insomnia we tend to divert people with
- 00:16:17what we term primary insomnia or or or
- 00:16:19insomnia without any underlying causes
- 00:16:21to assist a service if you look at
- 00:16:24insomnia chronic insomnia as a whole we
- 00:16:26know that there are some very good
- 00:16:28treatments for chronic insomnia and
- 00:16:30actually most of those treatments are
- 00:16:33focused on non-drug based treatments
- 00:16:35psychological based treatments and we
- 00:16:37know that those kind of treatments will
- 00:16:39significantly improve sleep in up to
- 00:16:41about 80% of individuals so that's a
- 00:16:43very large number actually and there are
- 00:16:46other treatments available it doesn't
- 00:16:48just rely on these non-drug based
- 00:16:49treatments there are some conditions
- 00:16:52like for example
- 00:16:53narcolepsy which is what's narpy so
- 00:16:55narcolepsy is a a brain disorder that is
- 00:16:58triggered by your immune system is that
- 00:17:00where you fall asleep during the day
- 00:17:02when you fall asleep very very quickly
- 00:17:04during the day you're excessively sleepy
- 00:17:06you have very vivid dreams you will
- 00:17:08often hallucinate as you drift off to
- 00:17:10sleep or as you wake up you'll
- 00:17:12experience something called sleep
- 00:17:13paralysis where you wake up and you feel
- 00:17:15that you are completely paralyzed you
- 00:17:17cannot move and a lot of these
- 00:17:19individuals also experience a condition
- 00:17:21called cataplexy which is where usually
- 00:17:24with strong emotion like laughter
- 00:17:26sometimes it can be the telling of a
- 00:17:27joke and they lose muscle strength and
- 00:17:30will sometimes collapse to the ground so
- 00:17:32it's a very pure neurological disorder
- 00:17:34because we know precisely where that
- 00:17:36area of immune attack occurs within the
- 00:17:39brain and it knocks out a very small
- 00:17:41number of brain cells to generate this
- 00:17:44this is a you know once you have it at
- 00:17:46the moment it's a lifelong condition but
- 00:17:48actually it can be treated there are
- 00:17:49many treatments available and even in
- 00:17:51the Last 5 Years or there have been many
- 00:17:54new treatments that have become
- 00:17:56available so actually all of these
- 00:17:58conditions are treatable they're
- 00:17:59manageable um they're not necessarily
- 00:18:02all curable is there something at the
- 00:18:04heart of culture and how we're living
- 00:18:06that's causing so many of us to struggle
- 00:18:08with sleep the way that modern society
- 00:18:10is at the moment certainly I think is
- 00:18:12rather conducive to insomnia in fact you
- 00:18:15know when uh researchers have looked at
- 00:18:19um at pre-industrialized societies so
- 00:18:23you know for example um tribes in um in
- 00:18:30Eastern Africa or in South America
- 00:18:32actually insomnia is relatively rare and
- 00:18:35some of these tribes don't even have the
- 00:18:37word for insomnia so I think that
- 00:18:39certainly insomnia seems to be
- 00:18:41correlated with the changes that have
- 00:18:43occurred in our in our society sleep
- 00:18:46apnea is often associated with weight
- 00:18:48gain and obviously that is very much a
- 00:18:50function of our modern societies so yes
- 00:18:54undoubtedly some of these conditions can
- 00:18:56be attributed to the way that we lead
- 00:18:59Our Lives some has anybody ever put like
- 00:19:01a sleep tracker on a tribe yes that has
- 00:19:03been done there's a chap called Jerry
- 00:19:05seagull who is based in the east coast
- 00:19:07in one of the ivy league universities
- 00:19:09who has spent his life doing that and
- 00:19:11what did he find out so he found out
- 00:19:14that actually sleep does vary a little
- 00:19:16bit according to the seasons that uh
- 00:19:18they don't necessarily sleep all the way
- 00:19:20through the night but actually their
- 00:19:21sleep is rather different to the sleep
- 00:19:23of modern society in what way they will
- 00:19:27not necessarily so this view that we
- 00:19:29sleep when it gets dark and or used to
- 00:19:31sleep when it gets dark and wake up at
- 00:19:33dawn is incorrect um that they uh that
- 00:19:37there is some fluctuation between the
- 00:19:39seasons but not
- 00:19:40necessarily um uh you know directly
- 00:19:44related to the number of hours of
- 00:19:45daylight and that insomnia is relatively
- 00:19:47rare when so that are they waking up in
- 00:19:50the middle of the night then uh I I
- 00:19:51think it's normal to wake up in the
- 00:19:53middle of the night that we all wake up
- 00:19:54in the middle of the night it's very
- 00:19:55rare that you uh for example do a sleep
- 00:19:58study on somebody and you don't see
- 00:20:00periods of awake in the middle of the
- 00:20:02night it's normal to be awake for up to
- 00:20:04about 30 minutes over the course of the
- 00:20:06night that in itself is not a marker of
- 00:20:09pathological
- 00:20:11sleep when I say awake I mean I mean I
- 00:20:14guess I mean getting up and walking
- 00:20:15around and stuff but yeah I mean I think
- 00:20:17that there are some individuals that do
- 00:20:18that there's a there's a a chap called
- 00:20:20Robert eirk who has spent a great deal
- 00:20:23of time looking at Medieval texts and
- 00:20:25seeing how they described sleep and he
- 00:20:28has put forward a hypothesis that in
- 00:20:31medieval times uh people would have a
- 00:20:33first sleep and a second sleep now I
- 00:20:35think that that theory is not
- 00:20:37universally accepted but certainly for
- 00:20:39some individuals getting up and walking
- 00:20:40around is is you know certainly within
- 00:20:43the Realms of normality I I think there
- 00:20:46are different sleep hands if you look
- 00:20:47for example at um Mediterranean Europe
- 00:20:50the Siesta culture so people sleeping
- 00:20:52for an hour or two at lunchtime but
- 00:20:55sleeping slightly less at night so um
- 00:20:58there are a range of sleep patterns that
- 00:21:01sit within the spectrum of normality for
- 00:21:04human beings is there such a thing as a
- 00:21:08healthy sleep as in you know see these
- 00:21:12sort of different sleep behaviors and
- 00:21:14such but is there from a neurology
- 00:21:16standpoint or clinical standpoint a
- 00:21:20perfect sleep or a perfect sleeping
- 00:21:23habit or you know right so I think the
- 00:21:26first thing to say is that sleep is
- 00:21:27different for everyone we know that
- 00:21:29there are genetic factors uh that
- 00:21:31influence for example your timing of
- 00:21:33sleep your circadian rhythm whether or
- 00:21:35not you're a uh a morning lck or an
- 00:21:38evening hour there are also genetic U
- 00:21:41influences over how much sleep we need
- 00:21:44so for example there are one or two
- 00:21:47families that I've seen in my clinical
- 00:21:49career in whom every single member of
- 00:21:51that family sleeps for 4 hours a night
- 00:21:53and has no ill effects and does not seem
- 00:21:56to have any long-term consequences from
- 00:21:59that they don't feel tired they there's
- 00:22:01no evidence that they're doing their
- 00:22:03physical health any harm and there have
- 00:22:05been some genes that have been
- 00:22:06identified that Define that trait now
- 00:22:07it's a rare trait and I wouldn't suggest
- 00:22:10that most people who are sleeping 4
- 00:22:11hours a night think oh I must be
- 00:22:13genetically blessed because the reality
- 00:22:15is probably somewhat different so I
- 00:22:18think that in answer to your specific
- 00:22:20question is there a perfect night's
- 00:22:21sleep no there isn't because it depends
- 00:22:23on the nature of who you are and what
- 00:22:26your genetic inheritance is but but
- 00:22:28certainly we can say on a population
- 00:22:30basis well you know sleeping somewhere
- 00:22:32between 7 and 8 and 1/ half hours a
- 00:22:34night if you look and a stress on a
- 00:22:36population basis we see ill effects in
- 00:22:40terms of sleeping less than 7 hours or
- 00:22:43sleeping more than 8 and a half hours if
- 00:22:45you look at for example all cause
- 00:22:47mortality or if you look at
- 00:22:49cardiovascular disease now there are
- 00:22:52various potential explanations for that
- 00:22:55um certainly if you're sleeping
- 00:22:57relatively little um you uh we can see
- 00:23:02that there are changes in terms of how
- 00:23:04your physiological system works that
- 00:23:07might give rise to things like blood
- 00:23:09pressure issues weight gain
- 00:23:11cardiovascular disease stroke those
- 00:23:13kinds of things what's a little bit more
- 00:23:16difficult to explain is why your
- 00:23:17mortality and other uh ill health goes
- 00:23:20up if you're sleeping more than about 8
- 00:23:22and 1 half hours and I think that that
- 00:23:24is probably a much more complicated
- 00:23:27picture in that we know that there are
- 00:23:30certain drugs that people will be on and
- 00:23:32when you're on drugs that's a marker
- 00:23:34that your health is not necessarily 100%
- 00:23:37already that will make you a bit more
- 00:23:39drowsy than you normally are and will
- 00:23:42extend your sleep time it may be that
- 00:23:43you have a sleep disorder which is
- 00:23:45causing you to sleep more but there's an
- 00:23:47another interesting potential
- 00:23:49explanation in that we know that for
- 00:23:51example in certain diseases of the brain
- 00:23:54there are changes to your sleep many
- 00:23:56years before sometimes even decades
- 00:23:58before for a really good example of that
- 00:24:00is Parkinson's disease so we know that
- 00:24:02in people with Parkinson's disease many
- 00:24:05individuals will start acting out their
- 00:24:07dreams at night sometimes even three
- 00:24:09decades before they then go on to
- 00:24:11develop Parkinson's disease so is it
- 00:24:14that our sleep intrinsically changes in
- 00:24:17as a precursor to certain conditions
- 00:24:19like Alzheimer's disease and there is
- 00:24:22some emerging evidence now that actually
- 00:24:24a change in your sleeping patterns
- 00:24:26either in terms of How Deeply you sleep
- 00:24:28how long you sleep whether or not you
- 00:24:30nap during the day that may be a what we
- 00:24:33term a prodromal feature of Alzheimer's
- 00:24:35disease do you see anything interesting
- 00:24:37happen when someone has a baby in terms
- 00:24:39of their I was wondering this the other
- 00:24:41day cuz I have a friend who's had um a
- 00:24:43couple of kids and I was looking at
- 00:24:45their sleep tracker and it seems like
- 00:24:47they have this inherent ability to
- 00:24:50survive now that they've had kids on
- 00:24:51like no sleep I was wondering if there's
- 00:24:53some sort of evolutionary mechanism that
- 00:24:55makes parents I don't know require less
- 00:24:59sleep yeah I'm not sure I can
- 00:25:01specifically answer that I've certainly
- 00:25:02seen a lot of people whose sleep has
- 00:25:04gone to pots after they've had kids and
- 00:25:06you know a lot of people say that their
- 00:25:08sleep has never returned to normal after
- 00:25:10they've survived having a couple of kids
- 00:25:13um but you know what you have to
- 00:25:15remember is that the brain is a
- 00:25:17remarkable organ in that it has all of
- 00:25:19these adaptive mechanisms that enable us
- 00:25:23to cope with changes in our
- 00:25:25circumstances changes in our environment
- 00:25:27so if you put put somebody in a sleep
- 00:25:29deprived State sleep also changes so
- 00:25:33what what the brain does is it
- 00:25:34prioritizes the very deepest stages of
- 00:25:37sleep stage three slow wave sleep over
- 00:25:40other stages of sleep and you know what
- 00:25:43we can see that in the sleep lab so if
- 00:25:45somebody's very sleep deprived before
- 00:25:46they come in and we put them in the
- 00:25:49sleep lab we see a sort of huge increase
- 00:25:52in their slow wave sleep which is the
- 00:25:54stage of sleep that's most associated
- 00:25:56with restoration with healing with
- 00:25:58feeling uh feeling more refreshed than
- 00:26:02other stages of sleep like for example
- 00:26:03REM sleep or dreaming sleep so the brain
- 00:26:06is prioritizing restoration faster than
- 00:26:09it would because the person sleep
- 00:26:11deprived absolutely yeah
- 00:26:14H so what is the you as you were saying
- 00:26:18there you've seen families that just
- 00:26:20require 4 hours sleep and they're
- 00:26:21apparently great is that is that a lot
- 00:26:24of people no it's as I said it's very
- 00:26:27very rare very rare cuz I've looked at
- 00:26:29people sleep trackers before and I've
- 00:26:30been astonished by how little sleep they
- 00:26:33seem to require but how active and great
- 00:26:36they seem to feel and I've and I I had
- 00:26:38this the other day cuz one of my fellow
- 00:26:40dragons I said this to her she requires
- 00:26:42very little sleep but then she gets up
- 00:26:43at 5 a.m. and goes for like a 10m run
- 00:26:46and I was like I was looking at her
- 00:26:47sleep tracker thinking you've been in
- 00:26:48bed for like 5 hours and you are
- 00:26:51extremely more awake and energetic than
- 00:26:54I am and you just did a 10mile run and
- 00:26:56I'll go in bed for seven hours
- 00:26:58and my it says that my you know stage
- 00:27:00three stage four sleep is higher than
- 00:27:02hers but for some reason she's like you
- 00:27:05know bouncing into the room well I I
- 00:27:07think there's two explanations for that
- 00:27:08the first is um maybe she is one of
- 00:27:11these genetically short sleepers
- 00:27:13although as I said that seems rather
- 00:27:15unlikely I think the other explanation
- 00:27:18is we we know that that you know I
- 00:27:20talked a little bit about how genes
- 00:27:22influence our sleep we know that there
- 00:27:23are genes that influence how resistant
- 00:27:26you are to the effects of sleep
- 00:27:29deprivation uh and what I mean by that
- 00:27:31is that there are there seem to be some
- 00:27:33individuals who don't feel or or who
- 00:27:36feel less sleepy than other people when
- 00:27:38they are sleep deprived but that may be
- 00:27:41separate from the cognitive effects of
- 00:27:44sleep deprivation so she might just not
- 00:27:47feel it she might not just feel it but
- 00:27:48she may exhibit those cognitive effects
- 00:27:51of sleep deprivation in the same way as
- 00:27:53you or or I for example she's 10 years
- 00:27:56older than me as well does that have
- 00:27:58well I think that certainly we do see
- 00:28:00some reduction in sleep requirement as
- 00:28:04we get older um we're also a little bit
- 00:28:06less about less good about maintaining
- 00:28:09sleep as we get older and that's because
- 00:28:10the brain mechanisms that stabilize
- 00:28:13sleep are becoming a little bit weaker
- 00:28:16so so this view that we need much less
- 00:28:19sleep as we get older is probably
- 00:28:22incorrect although there is a a slight
- 00:28:24reduction in sleep requirement you
- 00:28:26mentioned earlier that when people don't
- 00:28:28get enough sleep the chance of obesity
- 00:28:31and weight gain increases how how does
- 00:28:33that happen what's the mechanism so what
- 00:28:36there are probably many mechanisms but
- 00:28:37one of the the ones that is best
- 00:28:39understood is that we know that when
- 00:28:41you're sleep deprived or indeed when
- 00:28:43your sleep is disrupted by anything else
- 00:28:45like for example sleep apnea there are
- 00:28:49changes that occur in terms of hormone
- 00:28:51levels of of uh hormones that regulate
- 00:28:54our appetite and our satiety and so even
- 00:28:57as single night of sleep deprivation can
- 00:29:00result in a dramatic increase in your
- 00:29:02calorie intake uh overnight there have
- 00:29:05been some studies done for example in um
- 00:29:07nurses so uh there was a study done that
- 00:29:10followed up nurses for 18 years and they
- 00:29:13looked at their weight and how much they
- 00:29:15slept on a regular basis and what they
- 00:29:17found is that those nurses that were
- 00:29:20sleeping less than about 6 hours a night
- 00:29:24on a regular basis first of all started
- 00:29:26off at the beginning of that 18year
- 00:29:28period uh at a slightly higher weight
- 00:29:31but over the course of those 16 years uh
- 00:29:3418 years they put on much more weight
- 00:29:36than other groups so there is a very
- 00:29:38clear correlation between sleep duration
- 00:29:42Sleep Quality and weight gain we see
- 00:29:45that for example in individuals who we
- 00:29:47treat with sleep apnea so one of the
- 00:29:50treatments for sleep apnea is a mask
- 00:29:52like device that you wear that stops
- 00:29:54your Airway from closing down at night
- 00:29:57and and for some very overweight
- 00:30:00individuals actually when you treat
- 00:30:01their sleep apnea they do manage to
- 00:30:04successfully lose weight where in the
- 00:30:06past they found it absolutely impossible
- 00:30:09to do
- 00:30:10so okay so if I'm underslept I'm more
- 00:30:13likely to eat more calories the next day
- 00:30:17yes am I also more likely to to reach
- 00:30:19for foods that are like high in sugar
- 00:30:22and bad for me certainly some studies do
- 00:30:24suggest that I think it's also important
- 00:30:27to say that sleep disruption or sleep
- 00:30:29deprivation has some fundamental effects
- 00:30:32for example on um uh your glucose
- 00:30:35tolerance so your insulin resistance um
- 00:30:38which of course is a particular issue
- 00:30:39for people with diabetes but it affects
- 00:30:42us all so if you're very sleep deprived
- 00:30:44there are changes to the way that not
- 00:30:46only your appetite or what you're
- 00:30:49reaching for but also how your body
- 00:30:51processes the breakdown of those food
- 00:30:53stuffs interesting CU I anecdotally I
- 00:30:57think I can I can clearly say that if
- 00:31:01I'm if I'm underslept I'm much more
- 00:31:03likely to eat something that is high in
- 00:31:05sugar or well I think we can we can all
- 00:31:08testify to that can't we you know I
- 00:31:09think everybody has known that situation
- 00:31:12where they're very sleep deprived and
- 00:31:13they think oh well I just need a bit of
- 00:31:15chocolate or um you know what what
- 00:31:17what's going on in the brain though why
- 00:31:19is that is it is it something to do with
- 00:31:20the amigdala the prefrontal cortex the
- 00:31:22like the emotional center of our brain
- 00:31:23and the yeah I I don't I don't think we
- 00:31:26know I think it's probably to do with
- 00:31:29the reward mechanisms that underly our
- 00:31:33our behaviors that uh there is something
- 00:31:36about sleep deprivation that alters the
- 00:31:40rewards that we're seeking but I don't
- 00:31:42think I can give you a clear answer on
- 00:31:43that you you also talked about circadian
- 00:31:46rhythms if I if I was a 10-year-old what
- 00:31:49do I need to understand about the
- 00:31:50Circadian rhythm what it is what it does
- 00:31:53and why it's important so within pretty
- 00:31:55much every cell of our bodies there is
- 00:31:58this 24-hour clock and in fact if you
- 00:32:01take a single cell and stick it in a
- 00:32:03Petri dish about 40% of the genes within
- 00:32:07that cell will exhibit this sort of
- 00:32:0924-hour cycle and that 24-hour cycle
- 00:32:13really controls pretty much every
- 00:32:15biological system within our bodies be
- 00:32:17it how our liver Works how our heart
- 00:32:19Works how our lungs work there is one
- 00:32:22particular area of the brain called the
- 00:32:24supermatic nucleus that is viewed as the
- 00:32:26Master Clock it's the clock that
- 00:32:29coordinates all the other clocks within
- 00:32:31our within our bodies and that
- 00:32:34influences uh not only all of these
- 00:32:36other clocks that are occurring within
- 00:32:38the cells throughout our bodies but
- 00:32:40influences our Behavior as well so
- 00:32:42influences generally speaking when we
- 00:32:45feel tired and when we want to go to bed
- 00:32:48and when we wake up um and also
- 00:32:51influences things like you know when we
- 00:32:52feel most mentally alert when we want to
- 00:32:55eat when we want to drink when we feel
- 00:32:57most a able to cope with work for
- 00:33:00example um now that circadian rhythm
- 00:33:03that circadian clock for most people uh
- 00:33:06confers the Sleep onset of somewhere
- 00:33:10between 10: p.m. and midnight if you're
- 00:33:12an adult and waking up somewhere between
- 00:33:156:00 and 8:00 a.m. now the timing of
- 00:33:18that body clock is governed by two
- 00:33:21things it's governed by our genetics so
- 00:33:23whether or not we are um genetically
- 00:33:26predetermined to be slightly later in
- 00:33:28terms of our body clock or slightly
- 00:33:30earlier and we see that in families
- 00:33:32where lots of people with for example
- 00:33:34will say well you know I've always gone
- 00:33:36to bed late and woken up late but so is
- 00:33:38my father so is my grandfather etc etc
- 00:33:42um but it's also influenced by what's
- 00:33:44happening in our environment about 50%
- 00:33:47of the uh definers of our circadian
- 00:33:50clock are governed by what's going on
- 00:33:52around us be that in terms of when we're
- 00:33:55exposed to light so we know that light
- 00:33:57is a very
- 00:33:58important driver of our circadian rhythm
- 00:34:01when we're eating when we're exercising
- 00:34:04when we're doing a whole range of other
- 00:34:06activities and also one of the markers
- 00:34:08of our Cadian rhythm is the secretion of
- 00:34:11melatonin so there's a very small gland
- 00:34:13in the center of our brain called the
- 00:34:15pineal gland which secretes a a hormone
- 00:34:18called melatonin that hormone tends to
- 00:34:21start being secreted in most people at
- 00:34:23around 6:00 in the evening it Peaks at
- 00:34:25the time that we want to go go to sleep
- 00:34:28and then it starts dropping down a few
- 00:34:30hours before we wake up it's almost a a
- 00:34:33chemical marker of our Cadian Rhythm but
- 00:34:35we also know that giving people
- 00:34:37melatonin in tablet form for example can
- 00:34:40influence our Cadian Rhythm so there's
- 00:34:42this sort of feedback loop between our
- 00:34:44own body's secretion of melatonin and
- 00:34:47what our supermatic nucleus our
- 00:34:49masterclock is doing so by giving people
- 00:34:52melatonin at particular times of the day
- 00:34:54we can shift your cadan Rhythm forward
- 00:34:57or or back so that Master Clock in the
- 00:34:59brain where is it positioned the
- 00:35:02supermatic nucleus is in a small area of
- 00:35:05the brain called the the hypothalamus
- 00:35:07and is that linked to the eye there are
- 00:35:10links from the back of the eye to the
- 00:35:13hypothalamus so there are some cells in
- 00:35:15the back of the eye in the retina that
- 00:35:17are not involved in Vision not involved
- 00:35:19in conscious Vision but what they are
- 00:35:21involved with is detecting blue light in
- 00:35:24particular which is the part of the
- 00:35:26spectrum of light that is most important
- 00:35:28in terms of regulating our Cadian clock
- 00:35:31and there are direct links between these
- 00:35:32cells that are called retinal gangan
- 00:35:34cells and the supermatic nucleus so
- 00:35:38exposure to light to Blue Light in
- 00:35:41particular is really very important in
- 00:35:44reinforcing or adjusting arcaden Rhythm
- 00:35:46now of course we live in a in a world
- 00:35:48whereby the seasons change and the
- 00:35:50amounts of light that we're exposed to
- 00:35:52changes so if we were on a set Rhythm
- 00:35:55all the time that was immovable and un
- 00:36:00unadjustable then there would be times
- 00:36:03where our Cadian Rhythm might not be uh
- 00:36:07might might be at odds with our
- 00:36:08environment so there does need to be
- 00:36:10some slight adjustment of that Cadian
- 00:36:12Rhythm and light is probably the most
- 00:36:15important adjuster blue light is that
- 00:36:17the light that comes from my smartphone
- 00:36:20uh so it's so blue light obviously the
- 00:36:22the strongest source of blue light is
- 00:36:24Sun yeah um but yes these kinds of
- 00:36:27devices your smartphone your iPad in
- 00:36:30front of you a range of electronic
- 00:36:32devices also have Blue Light Within them
- 00:36:35so so that's why if I'm if I'm up on my
- 00:36:37phone till 1: a.m. in the morning
- 00:36:39staring into the screen I'm kind of
- 00:36:41tricking that sort of optic nerve which
- 00:36:43is then impacting my master clock and
- 00:36:46I'm I'm telling it that it's a different
- 00:36:48time yeah so so the thinking on that has
- 00:36:50changed a little bit over over the last
- 00:36:52few years so it you know it was said
- 00:36:55that using these devices will trigger
- 00:36:58insomnia as of as a result of blue light
- 00:37:01actually it's likely that the amount of
- 00:37:03blue light that these devices put out is
- 00:37:06probably insufficient to do that
- 00:37:08directly but there are two effects of
- 00:37:10using your Gadget until 1:00 a.m. the
- 00:37:13first is on a on a long-term basis if
- 00:37:15you're doing that regularly it will
- 00:37:17result in an adjustment of your
- 00:37:19circadian clock and push it back so you
- 00:37:22will want to go to bed a little bit
- 00:37:23later and wake up a little bit later
- 00:37:25which is fine if you're self employed or
- 00:37:28you don't have any restrictions on your
- 00:37:29time but most of us need to be up at a
- 00:37:31certain time in the morning and if your
- 00:37:33circadian rhythm is delayed
- 00:37:35significantly the net effect of that is
- 00:37:38that you're going to end up sleep
- 00:37:39deprived I mean there's also the issue
- 00:37:41of being you know on Twitter or being
- 00:37:43engrossed in a in a movie on Netflix at
- 00:37:461:00 a.m. that is going to make you
- 00:37:48delay sleep anyway so there are those
- 00:37:51two it's arousing it's arousing and it
- 00:37:54grips your
- 00:37:55attention well what do you make of these
- 00:37:57people me being one of them that watch
- 00:37:59you know serial killer movies when we
- 00:38:01fall asleep well I think that that's
- 00:38:03only an issue if it's stopping you from
- 00:38:04falling asleep do you see because I have
- 00:38:06this argument a lot with my partner she
- 00:38:08she can't understand why I I need to
- 00:38:10watch this like really stimulating stuff
- 00:38:12when I fall asleep she likes quiet and I
- 00:38:15need to I I tell myself I need to like
- 00:38:17listen to something do do you see like
- 00:38:21variance in in this kind of thing and is
- 00:38:23there a better approach or this comes
- 00:38:25down to
- 00:38:27individualized approach to sleep and
- 00:38:29that's why I'm always very reluctant to
- 00:38:31say this is the perfect night sleep
- 00:38:32these are the rules for sleep you know
- 00:38:35for example there are some people who uh
- 00:38:37for whom caffeine doesn't really
- 00:38:39influence their sleep and can have a
- 00:38:41double espresso an hour before bed and
- 00:38:43still have no problems getting off to
- 00:38:44sleep for most of us that's not the case
- 00:38:47um if you are somebody who can watch
- 00:38:50something very stimulating very scary
- 00:38:53and then switch it off and roll over and
- 00:38:55go off to sleep then I I guess that's
- 00:38:57not a problem for you for most people
- 00:39:00that's probably not the best thing to be
- 00:39:01doing at night I think that longterm one
- 00:39:04of the issues is with all of these kinds
- 00:39:07of activities in bed at night before you
- 00:39:10go off to sleep is that they weaken the
- 00:39:14psychological associations between bed
- 00:39:16and sleep and so if you start
- 00:39:19associating bed being a place where
- 00:39:21you're mentally active where you're
- 00:39:23engaged then if you have an underlying
- 00:39:26predisposition to insomnia for example
- 00:39:29then that can sometimes set the stage
- 00:39:32for developing insomnia later on the
- 00:39:34average person that you've treated
- 00:39:37worked with in your clinical practice
- 00:39:39that's struggling with sleep is at the
- 00:39:42heart of the issue just poor sort of
- 00:39:44sleep hygiene like you've said there
- 00:39:46yeah because I've got so many friends
- 00:39:47that say to me that they struggle with
- 00:39:49their sleep um many of them have
- 00:39:51struggled with it for years and I I
- 00:39:54doubt that there's some sort of genetic
- 00:39:56reason why this many people are
- 00:39:58struggling with sleep so I imagine it's
- 00:39:59just some kind of Behavioral reason so I
- 00:40:02think that the genes that predisposed to
- 00:40:05insomnia are pretty widespread but
- 00:40:07obviously you know in pretty much all
- 00:40:09areas of medicine there is an
- 00:40:10interaction between genetics and
- 00:40:12environment and certainly poor sleep
- 00:40:15hygiene and that's a it's a horrible
- 00:40:17term I hate that term but it's the term
- 00:40:19that is most widely used and understood
- 00:40:22can certainly put in place certain
- 00:40:25aspects of behavior that then can give
- 00:40:29rise to Chronic insomnia in the long
- 00:40:31term so if you've got very bad chronic
- 00:40:34insomnia then suddenly putting good
- 00:40:37sleep hygiene in place it's unlikely to
- 00:40:39fix it but it may be that that poor
- 00:40:41sleep hygiene in the first
- 00:40:43instance gave rise or at least
- 00:40:46predisposed you to developing insomnia
- 00:40:48and what is um poor sleep hygiene if I
- 00:40:51wanted to be the worst possible
- 00:40:53sleeper okay in the world what would I
- 00:40:56have to do so I think you would probably
- 00:40:59have to uh um set up your home office in
- 00:41:02your bedroom okay you'd have to have um
- 00:41:05you know your TV on in your bedroom all
- 00:41:07the time okay uh have be surrounded by
- 00:41:10electronic devices drink a lot of coffee
- 00:41:12late in the evening alcohol uh drinks a
- 00:41:15little bit of alcohol so alcohol in the
- 00:41:16short term of course is is quite
- 00:41:18sedating it's a central nervous system
- 00:41:20dep uh depressant but it does
- 00:41:23dramatically um worsen the quality of
- 00:41:26your sleep and for various reasons the
- 00:41:28direct chemical effect fact that you've
- 00:41:30got a full bladder um the fact that
- 00:41:31you're probably snoring a little bit
- 00:41:33more so alcohol's not a good thing um
- 00:41:35you know not having a wind down period
- 00:41:38so you
- 00:41:39know gambling on the stock market until
- 00:41:421:00 a.m. switching your laptop and then
- 00:41:44trying to go to bed uh those kinds of
- 00:41:46things so that's you know the
- 00:41:48quintessential very very bad sleep
- 00:41:50hygiene what about when I eat so uh you
- 00:41:54know eating is perhaps less important
- 00:41:55but avoiding a very large large
- 00:41:57carbohydrate meal carbohydrate Rich meal
- 00:42:00before you go to bed for two reasons one
- 00:42:03is that we know that it can cause some
- 00:42:04fluctuations in terms of your blood
- 00:42:06sugar and also if you've got a bit of
- 00:42:08reflux it can make that much worse okay
- 00:42:11what about sleeping in bed with somebody
- 00:42:13else well I think that for some people
- 00:42:16they and again this goes back to no one
- 00:42:18rule for everybody you know if you've
- 00:42:20got a a a sleep trait termed sleep
- 00:42:22reactivity which is where your sleep is
- 00:42:24very liable to your environment and then
- 00:42:27obviously sleeping next to somebody
- 00:42:29who's snoring loudly or who gets up in
- 00:42:31the middle of the night two or three
- 00:42:32times to to to urinate can be can be
- 00:42:36very disruptive to your sleep if you've
- 00:42:38got very little sleep reactivity you may
- 00:42:40actually find it comfortable more
- 00:42:42comfortable to sleep with somebody in
- 00:42:43the same bed as you I was um I was
- 00:42:45thinking the other day because where
- 00:42:47I've currently moved into there's no
- 00:42:50blinds or curtains in my bedroom and I
- 00:42:52was wondering if that might be a good
- 00:42:55thing because it at least means that in
- 00:42:58terms of my circadian rhythm I'm waking
- 00:43:01up at the same time every day because
- 00:43:03I'm waking up when the sun comes up yeah
- 00:43:04but the sun comes up at different times
- 00:43:06uh at on different days firstly um so if
- 00:43:10you were doing that routinely um you
- 00:43:13might find yourself really rather sleep
- 00:43:15deprived um in the summer months um and
- 00:43:19also there is some emerging evidence
- 00:43:21that exposure to light at um at night in
- 00:43:24your sleep is not very good for you so
- 00:43:27there was a very recent study that
- 00:43:29implied that light exposure at night
- 00:43:31increases your risk of diabetes so um it
- 00:43:36certainly is not good for the quality of
- 00:43:37your sleep and the likelihood is that
- 00:43:39you won't wake up as soon as it's light
- 00:43:41you'll wake up uh an hour or so after
- 00:43:43it's got light but during that hour or
- 00:43:46so it may have had a negative impact on
- 00:43:48the quality of your sleep so having a
- 00:43:50dark bedroom is really part of good
- 00:43:53sleep hygiene as is having a quiet
- 00:43:56bedroom that is not too hot or too cold
- 00:43:59what if you wear a sleep mask does that
- 00:44:02solve it yes it does I mean I wear a
- 00:44:04sleep mask I think it's you know
- 00:44:05particularly if you don't have good
- 00:44:07blackout curtains or blinds in your
- 00:44:10bedroom using a sleep mask particularly
- 00:44:12in the in the summer months is probably
- 00:44:14very helpful indeed does that mean that
- 00:44:16the only light receptors we have are
- 00:44:18behind her eyes well I think that there
- 00:44:20was a the there were some rumors uh on
- 00:44:23the internet that there were um light
- 00:44:25receptors elsewhere but certainly the
- 00:44:27the only ones that we um know to be of
- 00:44:30significance in terms of defining our
- 00:44:32Cadian Rhythm are the ones in our
- 00:44:34retinas because I I did psychology when
- 00:44:37I was in uh secondary school and I
- 00:44:39remember reading one of the psychology
- 00:44:40books maybe my psychology teacher told
- 00:44:42me this I think it was Mrs ly that there
- 00:44:44was some studies where they shined a
- 00:44:45light like underneath someone's knees
- 00:44:48yes and people would like wake up when
- 00:44:50they Shine the lights there I I think
- 00:44:52that that's been that's been very much
- 00:44:53discounted now it it's a bit strange
- 00:44:55though that the only light receptor
- 00:44:56would be behind the eyes it just feels
- 00:44:58like I don't know feels like poor design
- 00:45:02that there's only one place where we
- 00:45:04figure out if it's night or day so so
- 00:45:06you know you see that for example in
- 00:45:08people who've lost their sight right so
- 00:45:10so uh in uh some individuals who have
- 00:45:13lost their sight completely then they
- 00:45:16lose the regulation of their circadian
- 00:45:19rhythm and they develop circadian rhythm
- 00:45:21disorders something called a non 24-hour
- 00:45:24rhythm disorder whereby um their
- 00:45:26circadian rhythm is on a for example a
- 00:45:2925-hour cycle and so every night they
- 00:45:32will go to bed 1 hour later uh than they
- 00:45:35did the previous night and will go right
- 00:45:37the way around the clock you know every
- 00:45:40month or so um so you know that's a very
- 00:45:43good piece of evidence that actually
- 00:45:45it's those cells in the in the retina
- 00:45:48that are of crucial importance for
- 00:45:49maintaining the stability of Arcadian
- 00:45:52Rhythm I I've wrote that down it I wrote
- 00:45:54down in one recent study 40% of totally
- 00:45:56blind indiv ual had a non 24-hour
- 00:45:58circadian rhythm which really kind of
- 00:46:01for me also highlights just how
- 00:46:02important it is
- 00:46:03to um think about my circadian rhythm
- 00:46:06and how much impact it's having on my
- 00:46:08whole body the the other part you
- 00:46:09mentioned was the biological element to
- 00:46:12our Cadian rhythms which which people
- 00:46:14refer to as chronotypes yes and I this
- 00:46:17idea of chronotypes which is essentially
- 00:46:18from my understanding that genetically
- 00:46:21we all have a slight sort of disposition
- 00:46:23to sleep in at certain times yes and to
- 00:46:26wake up at certain times yeah so there's
- 00:46:28these names right there's like the
- 00:46:30owl the L or whatever else I think I'm
- 00:46:33an owl but that also could just be bad
- 00:46:35habits yeah so so the you know certainly
- 00:46:37there's that sort of genetic
- 00:46:39predisposition there's also these
- 00:46:41environmental factors but there's also
- 00:46:43age in that our circadian rhythm changes
- 00:46:45a little bit as we go through different
- 00:46:47stages of life so you know it's not at
- 00:46:49all uncommon for teenagers to become
- 00:46:52more evening chronotypes and then as we
- 00:46:56get older we tend to shift back to the
- 00:46:58morning so that's part and parcel of our
- 00:47:01aging biology as well so so I think that
- 00:47:05you know genetics is really important
- 00:47:07but so but so are other factors as well
- 00:47:09studies in twins um suggest that up to
- 00:47:1250% of our chronotype is under genetic
- 00:47:15control so does that suggest that we are
- 00:47:17likely to have a similar chronotype to
- 00:47:21our
- 00:47:22family we are likely to but obviously
- 00:47:25our environment is not going to be
- 00:47:27exactly the same as our parents or you
- 00:47:29know what we do our behaviors are not
- 00:47:30going to be uh um identical to our
- 00:47:33parents or our siblings so yes we more
- 00:47:36frequently see that for example people
- 00:47:39have a evening chronotype that runs in
- 00:47:42families um but that doesn't mean that
- 00:47:45you know look we we we're more than just
- 00:47:47the destiny of the genes that we hold um
- 00:47:50obviously our genes are really important
- 00:47:52um but so are other factors as well if
- 00:47:55someone came to and they said I'm
- 00:47:57struggling with my sleep you know
- 00:48:00multiple nights in a row I haven't been
- 00:48:01able to sleep I'm getting in bed and
- 00:48:03nothing's happening and then I'm waking
- 00:48:04up and I'm just sat there thinking about
- 00:48:07you know sleeping and um I feel horrific
- 00:48:10where would you start so I would start I
- 00:48:13think by trying to understand what it is
- 00:48:16that is causing their sleep issues
- 00:48:18because a lot of the individuals that I
- 00:48:21see who have been referred in with that
- 00:48:23sort of picture assume that they've got
- 00:48:25insomnia and they may not always have
- 00:48:27insomnia so I I think a key issue is
- 00:48:31that we are really really poor witnesses
- 00:48:35to our own sleep and what I mean by that
- 00:48:38is that we
- 00:48:40often our experience of sleep is very
- 00:48:43different to the reality of sleep when
- 00:48:45we bring in people into the Sleep
- 00:48:47laboratory it's not at all unusual and I
- 00:48:50will almost always ask this question
- 00:48:52when I'm going through a sleep study
- 00:48:53with one of my patients is how much
- 00:48:56sleep do you s you got over the course
- 00:48:58of that night and it's not at all
- 00:49:00unusual for people to say to me well I
- 00:49:01think I got two or 3 hours sleep
- 00:49:03occasionally even they say well I didn't
- 00:49:05sleep at all and then you look at their
- 00:49:07brain waves you look at the best
- 00:49:09objective marker that you've got of
- 00:49:12their sleep and you see that they've
- 00:49:14slept s and a half eight hours so
- 00:49:17obviously what people are experiencing
- 00:49:19is really important because ultimately
- 00:49:20from my perspective I want to improve
- 00:49:23people's experience of their sleep and
- 00:49:25what it is that they're they're they're
- 00:49:27complaining of but it's important
- 00:49:30to understand that what they're telling
- 00:49:32you may not necessarily be the objective
- 00:49:35truth now that's really important when
- 00:49:37it comes to insomnia because it's not
- 00:49:39unusual for me to see individuals who
- 00:49:43you know they give you a story of very
- 00:49:44clear insomnia but actually when you
- 00:49:46look at their sleep objectively you find
- 00:49:48that although they say they haven't
- 00:49:51slept at all they've slept 7 hours but
- 00:49:53that 7 hours has been completely
- 00:49:55disrupted by conditions like periodic
- 00:49:58limb movement disorder which is this
- 00:50:00these leg kicks associated with restless
- 00:50:02leg syndrome or sleep apnea for example
- 00:50:05now sometimes it's very evident from
- 00:50:06what people tell you that actually
- 00:50:08that's not the case that they've just
- 00:50:10got very clear insomnia so so that's
- 00:50:14really the starting point to try and
- 00:50:16decide whether or not you feel confident
- 00:50:19enough in your clinical evaluation of
- 00:50:21them that that you know what the issue
- 00:50:24is without doing a sleep study and if
- 00:50:25you think that they do need a sleep
- 00:50:27study then that's the point at which we
- 00:50:29we we arrange for that it's also trying
- 00:50:31to understand some of the factors that
- 00:50:33might be driving their sleep
- 00:50:34difficulties so for example was their
- 00:50:37sleep were their sleep difficulties
- 00:50:39triggered by a life event did they have
- 00:50:42sleep reactivity before this insomnia
- 00:50:44started so were they one of those
- 00:50:46individuals who could sleep anywhere at
- 00:50:47any time whatever they wanted uh
- 00:50:50whenever they wanted to put their head
- 00:50:51down or were they kind of an individual
- 00:50:53who the night before an exam before a
- 00:50:55job interview before a
- 00:50:57a presentation would lose sleep because
- 00:51:00that often is a very strong marker for
- 00:51:02developing insomnia uh later on in life
- 00:51:05uh and then it's also about trying to
- 00:51:09understand how the rest of their health
- 00:51:10is impacted by their sleep but also how
- 00:51:14the rest of their health impacts on
- 00:51:16sleep so it's not at all unusual for me
- 00:51:18to see individuals who have been started
- 00:51:20on medications for other reasons that
- 00:51:21have generated sleep issues for
- 00:51:24example you talked about this sort of
- 00:51:26obsession with sleep and I was wondering
- 00:51:28in the case of the patient you've just
- 00:51:30described would you encourage them to
- 00:51:32wear a sleep tracker so first of all I
- 00:51:35have to say that I'm not ideologically
- 00:51:37opposed to sleep trackers in general I
- 00:51:39think that they are really really good
- 00:51:42for example in research um you know
- 00:51:44fantastic for research it allows us to
- 00:51:46track sleep in very very large numbers
- 00:51:49of individuals and try and work out how
- 00:51:51that correlates with whatever we're
- 00:51:53interested in one of the major issues
- 00:51:56with sleep trackers is that the people
- 00:51:58who often use sleep trackers are
- 00:52:00individuals who already are concerned
- 00:52:03about their sleep so if you know that
- 00:52:06you're sleeping relatively little and
- 00:52:08you wake up feeling tired then you
- 00:52:10probably know you're not sleeping enough
- 00:52:12you don't necessarily need a sleep
- 00:52:13tracker to tell you that if you're one
- 00:52:15of these individuals who has insomnia
- 00:52:17who is spending plenty of time in bed
- 00:52:19but simply cannot get the amount of
- 00:52:21sleep that they need um then what a
- 00:52:23sleep tracker will do is it'll increase
- 00:52:26your
- 00:52:27concern your anxiety around your sleep
- 00:52:30it's a very different picture from for
- 00:52:32example using a a step tracker if you're
- 00:52:35sitting on the sofa and you look at your
- 00:52:37step tracker and you realize you've only
- 00:52:38done whatever it is 5,000 steps it's
- 00:52:41very easy to get up and go for a walk
- 00:52:43and do another 5,000 steps if your sleep
- 00:52:46tracker is telling you you slept really
- 00:52:47badly and you know you slept really
- 00:52:49badly and you're already worried about
- 00:52:50how badly you sleep there's nothing that
- 00:52:52you can do on the basis of the
- 00:52:55information that your sleep tracker is
- 00:52:56giving you to suddenly go and get a
- 00:52:59little bit more sleep and It's
- 00:53:01Complicated by the fact that you know
- 00:53:03sleep trackers are pretty good at
- 00:53:05telling you how much time you spent in
- 00:53:06bed they're reasonably good at telling
- 00:53:09you how quickly you dropped off to sleep
- 00:53:12the reliability the accuracy of these
- 00:53:14devices most of these devices drops off
- 00:53:17significantly when it comes to for
- 00:53:19example defining nighttime Awakenings
- 00:53:21defining stages of sleep those kinds of
- 00:53:24things so then you have that additional
- 00:53:26is in the mix which is that sometimes
- 00:53:28your sleep tracker may be giving you
- 00:53:30information that is not factually
- 00:53:31correct and that may increase your
- 00:53:33anxiety further so I'm really very very
- 00:53:37keen for people who have issues with
- 00:53:41their sleep rather than just burning the
- 00:53:43candle at both ends to put away their
- 00:53:45sleep tracker and actually go and have a
- 00:53:47chat with their GP or somebody who knows
- 00:53:49a little bit about sleep rather than
- 00:53:51relying on this sleep tracking
- 00:53:53technology do you think sleep trackers
- 00:53:55have had a net negative NE ative or
- 00:53:56positive impact on sleep
- 00:53:58culture I think that for those
- 00:54:01individuals who can fix their sleep in a
- 00:54:05very straightforward Way by spending
- 00:54:07more time in bed so the kind of people
- 00:54:10that I talked about that 20 years ago
- 00:54:12would be saying well you know I only
- 00:54:14sleep 5 hours and you know because I'm
- 00:54:16busy doing x y and Zed and I can get
- 00:54:18away with it I think it's probably
- 00:54:19encouraged them to spend a bit more time
- 00:54:21in bed because they know they have a a
- 00:54:23very clear um very clear bit of
- 00:54:27information that's telling them that
- 00:54:28they're not sleeping enough but for the
- 00:54:31people that I see the people who are
- 00:54:33already concerned about their sleep uh
- 00:54:36and who have difficulties with their
- 00:54:37sleep I think it's been a very negative
- 00:54:41impact um and I have some reservations
- 00:54:45about well people like myself um sitting
- 00:54:49on these kinds of podcasts or writing in
- 00:54:52newspapers telling you well you know if
- 00:54:54you don't get enough sleep you're going
- 00:54:55to die early you're going to have all
- 00:54:56these negative Health consequences
- 00:54:59because for a subgroup of individuals
- 00:55:01who are already very concerned about
- 00:55:02their sleep that actually can cause
- 00:55:06problems and I have seen individuals who
- 00:55:09for example have read books on sleep and
- 00:55:11how important it is on sleep who have
- 00:55:13ended up going into a spiral of insomnia
- 00:55:15and very catastrophic depression and
- 00:55:17anxiety as a result so so it's very you
- 00:55:20know it's very important to be clear
- 00:55:21that the all of this is a double-edged
- 00:55:23sword it's interesting with with sleep
- 00:55:25trackers um um I can see I think it's
- 00:55:29worth me saying that I am both an
- 00:55:32investor in whoop and I'm also sponsored
- 00:55:35by whoop okay but I also agree with the
- 00:55:37things you've said so I've seen this
- 00:55:40this sort of variance in how a sleep
- 00:55:43tracker can improve some people's lives
- 00:55:47and it can make other people more
- 00:55:48anxious in a way that's not helpful so
- 00:55:51for me my sort of testimony on it is um
- 00:55:55I was one of those people described
- 00:55:56earlier that thought sleep was take it
- 00:55:58or leave it and when I started seeing a
- 00:56:02sleep track it's kind of like that when
- 00:56:03I saw my brain for the first time I did
- 00:56:05a brain scan and I didn't even kind of
- 00:56:06like realize it was there and that I
- 00:56:08could influence it and that things I was
- 00:56:10doing um without really thinking much
- 00:56:12were having this big impact and for me
- 00:56:15what it did is it allowed me to finally
- 00:56:17make this link between how much sleep
- 00:56:19I've had and then how I behave now I
- 00:56:22thought my behavior was random before
- 00:56:24but seeing that when when my sleep um
- 00:56:26scores were down I was way more
- 00:56:28emotional I was way more likely to eat
- 00:56:31crap uh and the other thing that I saw
- 00:56:32which was really interesting was that
- 00:56:34when I had a glass of wine or two
- 00:56:36glasses of wi three glasses of wine that
- 00:56:37it just like destroyed my sleep and I
- 00:56:40never knew that before and I was in
- 00:56:41search of reasons to quit alcohol anyway
- 00:56:43and when I saw that I quit alcohol
- 00:56:44forever so I've not drunk since so and
- 00:56:47then for me I have to also say there are
- 00:56:49moments in my life where life happens
- 00:56:51and I know I'm not going to sleep and I
- 00:56:53don't pay attention to my sleep tracker
- 00:56:54but there are other moments where um I
- 00:56:57have a bit more control and that's when
- 00:56:59I kind of tune into my sleep tracker
- 00:57:00I've also had Parents message me a lot
- 00:57:02and say listen I've got a one-year-old a
- 00:57:042-year-old a three-year-old whatever
- 00:57:06there's no point me wearing a sleep
- 00:57:07tracker because listen I'm not going to
- 00:57:08get any sleep and I also completely
- 00:57:10agree with them that there's really no
- 00:57:11point in that situation I think there's
- 00:57:13a point when there's something you can
- 00:57:15do about it and that's kind say that's
- 00:57:17absolutely key yeah so so the the the
- 00:57:20the point of doing anything like that is
- 00:57:23if there are very clear things that you
- 00:57:25can do on your own to close that Loop
- 00:57:28there's no point having information
- 00:57:30without being able to act upon it and I
- 00:57:32guess if you are one of those
- 00:57:33individuals like yourself who very
- 00:57:36clearly can correlate certain things
- 00:57:37that they're doing in their daytime
- 00:57:39lives with their sleep and and and how
- 00:57:41they feel subsequently then then great
- 00:57:44you know I guess I have a little bit of
- 00:57:45bias in that the people that I see are
- 00:57:47already struggling with their sleep
- 00:57:49already and so it goes back I guess
- 00:57:51we're completely in agreement yeah yeah
- 00:57:53we are yeah and it's so interesting cuz
- 00:57:55I that's been a developing idea cuz
- 00:57:56obviously my bias is always like
- 00:57:58wouldn't you rather know cuz that's you
- 00:58:00know but then from doing this podcast
- 00:58:03I've I've seen the comments and I've
- 00:58:04seen the struggle in from speaking to
- 00:58:06parents that struggling with their sleep
- 00:58:08and it's kind of sometimes just makes
- 00:58:10them feel worse about it um I think
- 00:58:12Nuance is necessary on this issue um and
- 00:58:16I'm sure there's a lot of a lot of
- 00:58:17things in my life that I wouldn't like
- 00:58:19to be able to track because either I I
- 00:58:21don't have control of them right now or
- 00:58:23you know um maybe they'd make me feel
- 00:58:26more anxious there's this thing called
- 00:58:28the glymphatic system which I find
- 00:58:30really which when I discovered this I I
- 00:58:32it really helped me to understand the
- 00:58:34importance of sleep can you explain what
- 00:58:36the glymphatic system is as if I was a
- 00:58:3810-year-old yeah so um within our bodies
- 00:58:43there is a a system a very similar
- 00:58:45system called the lymphatic system so
- 00:58:47people will have heard of lymph nodes
- 00:58:48for example and this is a system whereby
- 00:58:51fluid that comes out of the blood
- 00:58:53vessels and into the tissues is then
- 00:58:56collected and transported back into the
- 00:58:59the cardiovascular system and we used to
- 00:59:01think that there was no equ equivalent
- 00:59:05system in the brain but actually you
- 00:59:07know over the last 20 years we've
- 00:59:09understood that whilst there are no sort
- 00:59:11of lymph nodes or things like that there
- 00:59:13are these very small channels between
- 00:59:15the cells that are responsible for
- 00:59:18draining fluid from the brain and um
- 00:59:23those um systems are responsible for
- 00:59:27removing certain toxins or metabolites
- 00:59:30chemicals that have built up as a result
- 00:59:32of metabolic activity within the brain
- 00:59:34and removing them from the brain
- 00:59:36substance
- 00:59:37itself now it's like a car wash um like
- 00:59:41like a drainage system you know like
- 00:59:43like like a gutter for example um you
- 00:59:46know that takes the suds from the car
- 00:59:48wash away and puts them into the drain
- 00:59:51um in about 2011 if my memory serves me
- 00:59:56correct there were some studies done
- 00:59:58that looked at that lymphatic system in
- 01:00:00different stages of sleep and what they
- 01:00:03described was that that lymphatic system
- 01:00:06opens up significantly by about
- 01:00:0960% in very deep sleep in the deepest
- 01:00:13stages of sleep and so and so subsequent
- 01:00:16research showed that for example one of
- 01:00:18the proteins that was being removed was
- 01:00:21a protein called betoid that is that is
- 01:00:24intimately tied to Alzheimer's disease
- 01:00:27and so the view that deep sleep was
- 01:00:32particularly resp responsible for
- 01:00:34housekeeping of the brain for chemical
- 01:00:36housekeeping of the brain came about it
- 01:00:38gets a bit more complicated because
- 01:00:40actually only two or three weeks ago
- 01:00:42another study suggested that that 60%
- 01:00:44increase in the lymphatic system was not
- 01:00:47the case and so I think that this
- 01:00:50remains an area that there is some
- 01:00:53uncertainty about but actually there are
- 01:00:56many reasons to tie in sleep in general
- 01:01:00separate from the lymphatic system into
- 01:01:02a general housekeeping role of the brain
- 01:01:05and I think that um certainly this is an
- 01:01:09area that is going to keep researchers
- 01:01:11very very busy over the next 10 or 20
- 01:01:14years this uh association between sleep
- 01:01:18cognition and cognitive decline in later
- 01:01:21life that that protein that seems
- 01:01:24to Spike if we are sleep deprived beta
- 01:01:28ameloid beta amid yeah and that's linked
- 01:01:31to alzheimer's it is yeah so in
- 01:01:33Alzheimer's disease we see beta ameloid
- 01:01:35deposition within the brain substance
- 01:01:37itself what does deposition mean so uh
- 01:01:39it's deposited within the brain if
- 01:01:42someone has Alzheimer's they have a sort
- 01:01:44of the build a buildup of buildup of
- 01:01:46beta ameloid in the the brain substance
- 01:01:50is there a link between sleep
- 01:01:51deprivation and Alzheimer's do we see
- 01:01:53high numbers so there is some evidence
- 01:01:56to suggest that uh both chronic sleep
- 01:02:00deprivation and insomnia are associated
- 01:02:03with cognitive decline and conditions
- 01:02:07like dementia it goes back to what I was
- 01:02:09saying earlier which is but by the way
- 01:02:12there's also some studies that have
- 01:02:13suggested links between sleeping tablets
- 01:02:15and conditions like Alzheimer's so it
- 01:02:18goes back to this issue of whether or
- 01:02:21not it's the insomnia or the sleep
- 01:02:24deprivation that causes Alzheimer's is
- 01:02:27it sleeping tablets that causes
- 01:02:30Alzheimer's or is it the fact that
- 01:02:32Alzheimer's many many years before
- 01:02:35causes changes to our sleep and and so I
- 01:02:39think that that story is not yet been um
- 01:02:43has not yet come to fruition in terms of
- 01:02:46our fundamental understanding of the
- 01:02:47links between sleep and Alzheimer's
- 01:02:51disease and whether or not it's directly
- 01:02:53causative do you
- 01:02:57recommend slash are you a fan of you
- 01:03:00reference sleep tablets there sleep
- 01:03:02medicine medication yeah so as a general
- 01:03:05we know because I think that there are
- 01:03:07um good now non-drug based techniques
- 01:03:12for trying to improve sleep in the
- 01:03:15majority of people with
- 01:03:17insomnia um there is some evidence that
- 01:03:21for example if people don't respond to
- 01:03:24these non-drug based methods giving them
- 01:03:25sleeping tablets alongside these
- 01:03:27non-drug based methods makes it more
- 01:03:29likely for the psychological route to
- 01:03:34help but you know unfortunately as part
- 01:03:36of my clinical practice I see lots of
- 01:03:38people who've been struggling with their
- 01:03:39sleep for many many years and they've
- 01:03:41tried all non-drug based
- 01:03:44treatment and the risks of them sleeping
- 01:03:48so little in terms of their mood their
- 01:03:51anxiety their ability to function are so
- 01:03:55great that actually you have on a caseby
- 01:03:57casee basis to make a judgment call as
- 01:04:00to whether or not to say well I give up
- 01:04:01on your sleep or actually you say well
- 01:04:03look there are a number of drugs that we
- 01:04:05can try to try and improve your sleep
- 01:04:08and it's not going to get you back to
- 01:04:10normal but it's going to potentially
- 01:04:12make the difference between you you know
- 01:04:14end up very depressed or or or or highly
- 01:04:16anxious and unable to cope in your life
- 01:04:18or actually get some decent sleep um and
- 01:04:22the risks of those drugs and that needs
- 01:04:25to be judged on a case-by casee basis
- 01:04:27and is part of clinical medicine
- 01:04:29whenever we prescribe any medication for
- 01:04:31anybody for any condition we have to
- 01:04:34evaluate what the potential benefits are
- 01:04:36versus the potential risks a lot of
- 01:04:38people seem to be taking melatonin yeah
- 01:04:40tablets is is that healthy is that free
- 01:04:43from side effects so it's not entirely
- 01:04:45free of side effects um but it's
- 01:04:48generally a pretty well tolerated safe
- 01:04:51drug as far as we know there are some
- 01:04:54specific issues surrounding melatonin um
- 01:04:58but a question really would have to be
- 01:05:01well why are you taking that melatonin
- 01:05:02is there something that you can do to
- 01:05:05fix your sleep without relying relying
- 01:05:08on an exogenous substance something that
- 01:05:10you've bought off the shelf or being
- 01:05:12prescribed is is the my hesitation and
- 01:05:16reservation with taking things like
- 01:05:17melatonin is always that I just assume
- 01:05:19that my body will become a little bit
- 01:05:20reliant on it yeah well fair I I think
- 01:05:24whether it become whether you become
- 01:05:25come physiologically biologically
- 01:05:27Reliant upon it or psychologically
- 01:05:30Reliant upon it it it it remains
- 01:05:33unanswered but certainly that you know
- 01:05:35there are individuals who for example
- 01:05:37will say well as long as I know that
- 01:05:38I've got a bottle of melatonin or you
- 01:05:40know the sleeping tablets in my bedside
- 01:05:42cabinet I sleep fine as soon as I know
- 01:05:45that I haven't got access to them I
- 01:05:46don't sleep very well at all and so that
- 01:05:49I think exhibits that this is almost
- 01:05:50like a psychological crutch knowing
- 01:05:52something that they've got uh next to
- 01:05:55their bed that they can reach for in
- 01:05:57order to achieve a good night's sleep is
- 01:05:59sometimes as important is as important
- 01:06:01as the biological effects of taking that
- 01:06:04tablet I mean that kind of leads to the
- 01:06:07non-medical techniques to improve our
- 01:06:09sleep so you said typically with with
- 01:06:12someone that comes to your sort of sleep
- 01:06:13center instead of going straight to
- 01:06:15medication as the answer to their sleep
- 01:06:16issues you would suggest and or try
- 01:06:20non-medical interventions yes and you
- 01:06:23said that these work well yes what are
- 01:06:25these non-medical intervention so the
- 01:06:27gold standard treatment now for insomnia
- 01:06:30is a treatment called cognitive
- 01:06:31behavioral therapy for insomnia okay so
- 01:06:34a lot of people have heard of CBT
- 01:06:36because they will have heard of it in
- 01:06:37the context of depression and treatment
- 01:06:39of depression or anxiety now CBT for
- 01:06:42insomnia is not actually directly
- 01:06:44related to the CBT that's used for
- 01:06:46depression and anxiety it borrows from
- 01:06:48the principles of CBT and applies them
- 01:06:51to sleep and it serves two purposes the
- 01:06:55first is to try and address some of
- 01:06:58those conscious psychological factors
- 01:07:00that are driving insomnia and when I
- 01:07:02talk about conscious factors I'm talking
- 01:07:04about things like the frustration or
- 01:07:06anxiety of the night ahead of lying in
- 01:07:09bed at night feeling that you can't get
- 01:07:12off to sleep and the frustration and
- 01:07:14anxiety that that engenders of having
- 01:07:16your partner snoring away in bed next to
- 01:07:19you whilst you're struggling to go off
- 01:07:20to sleep of worrying about how you're
- 01:07:23going to be able to function the
- 01:07:24following day or potentially even the
- 01:07:26long-term effects of your insomnia so
- 01:07:29those are the conscious psychologic
- 01:07:31factors and cbti aims to address those
- 01:07:34but it also aims to restore
- 01:07:37normal um
- 01:07:39unconscious factors that give rise to
- 01:07:41good sleep so if you've spent a great
- 01:07:43deal of time in bed at night awake then
- 01:07:48those normal associations that good
- 01:07:50sleepers have between bed and sleep so
- 01:07:52for a good sleeper they will associate
- 01:07:55bed with being a place of comfort with
- 01:07:57being a calming relaxing place a place
- 01:07:59that they associate with a good night's
- 01:08:01sleep if your sleep has been disrupted
- 01:08:03for a period of time and you've spent
- 01:08:05long periods of time in bed awake then
- 01:08:08that positive association between bed
- 01:08:10and sleep is replaced by negative
- 01:08:12association so you you begin on a
- 01:08:14unconscious basis
- 01:08:16pavlovian conditioning it's called um
- 01:08:20you associate that bed environment with
- 01:08:22being awake with being wired and that's
- 01:08:25often what gives rise to this sensation
- 01:08:27of having lost the switch to be able to
- 01:08:30get off to sleep in fact some people
- 01:08:32with insomnia will say well look you
- 01:08:33know if I'm sitting in front of the
- 01:08:35television and I'm sitting on the sofa
- 01:08:37and I'm not thinking about sleep at all
- 01:08:39I'm not thinking about bed I will often
- 01:08:40find that I've dozed off and then I'll
- 01:08:43go upstairs get into bed and as soon as
- 01:08:45my head hits the pillow ping I'm wide
- 01:08:47awake and I suddenly feel wired so
- 01:08:49that's very illustrative of that sort of
- 01:08:52unconscious association between bed and
- 01:08:56being awake rather than being asleep and
- 01:08:57so cbtr aims to address that as well how
- 01:09:00does it how does it do that so it uses a
- 01:09:02variety of different techniques so uses
- 01:09:04some standard sort of relaxation
- 01:09:06techniques to try and reduce the level
- 01:09:09of vigilance of physiological of mental
- 01:09:13arousal that you have when you get off
- 01:09:14to bed but also it aims to utilize a a
- 01:09:18variety of techniques to reprogram your
- 01:09:21brain to associate bed with sleep so one
- 01:09:24of the ways in which you can do that is
- 01:09:26you can actually utilize your brain's
- 01:09:28own
- 01:09:30mechanisms um that drive you to go off
- 01:09:33to sleep so that's something called the
- 01:09:35homeostatic mechanism which we'll all be
- 01:09:37very familiar with but not in those
- 01:09:39terms so the more you've been awake the
- 01:09:42stronger the chemical drive for your
- 01:09:44brain to go off to sleep so one of the
- 01:09:49features of cbti is to compress your
- 01:09:52sleep or to restrict your sleep for a
- 01:09:54period of time essentially what that
- 01:09:57means is well if you are an in somebody
- 01:09:59with insomnia and you estimate for
- 01:10:02example that you're only sleeping a
- 01:10:03total of 6 hours a night in bed um but
- 01:10:07you're spending 8 hours a night in bed
- 01:10:11then you for a period of time you say
- 01:10:13well look I want you to get into bed at
- 01:10:15midnight and whatever happens I want you
- 01:10:18to get out of bed at 6:00 a.m. so to
- 01:10:20restrict the time in bed to 6 hours so
- 01:10:24the first few nights
- 01:10:26most people with insomnia will sleep
- 01:10:27really badly because they know that
- 01:10:28their alarm is going off at 6:00 and
- 01:10:30they know they have to get off get out
- 01:10:31of bed at 600 but after a little while
- 01:10:35they become so sleep deprived that the
- 01:10:37brain starts forcing you to go off to
- 01:10:41sleep much more quickly and over time
- 01:10:44more and more of that 6 hours a night
- 01:10:46will be spent asleep in bed and that's
- 01:10:48the first step in Breaking that negative
- 01:10:51association between bed and wake and
- 01:10:54rebuilding a positive of association
- 01:10:56between bed and sleep I mean at its
- 01:11:00extreme there is a technique that was
- 01:11:02developed in Australia which is called
- 01:11:04intensive sleep retraining and in that
- 01:11:07technique people who've got very bad
- 01:11:09insomnia are brought into a sleep
- 01:11:12laboratory having been awake for the
- 01:11:15night before they come in so they come
- 01:11:17in in the evening having been awake for
- 01:11:20now probably 36
- 01:11:22hours every half an hour they're given
- 01:11:25the opportunity to drop off to sleep
- 01:11:28they have some wires on their heads
- 01:11:30their brain waves are being tracked um
- 01:11:32but as soon as they've been asleep for 3
- 01:11:34minutes based on their brain waves
- 01:11:36they're woken up again and that happens
- 01:11:38every half hour for 25 hours so over the
- 01:11:41course of that 25-hour period they have
- 01:11:4350 opportunities to nap now for most
- 01:11:46people with insomnia having been awake
- 01:11:47even having been awake the previous TW
- 01:11:50uh 36 hours they will still not be able
- 01:11:53to get off to sleep for the first few
- 01:11:54naps but as they get more and more sleep
- 01:11:56deprived every time they're given the
- 01:11:59opportunity to drop off to sleep they
- 01:12:01will start falling asleep more quickly
- 01:12:03and at the end of that 50 naps they will
- 01:12:06be dropping off to sleep very quickly as
- 01:12:08soon as the lights go off um and
- 01:12:11actually the evidence suggests that
- 01:12:12that's a very good um short-term
- 01:12:15treatment for chronic insomnia and in
- 01:12:18some individuals it works extremely well
- 01:12:21in reassociating your head hitting the
- 01:12:24pillow with drifting off to sleep I
- 01:12:26wouldn't suggest it for most people cuz
- 01:12:28it's basically a form of torture but I
- 01:12:30think it illustrates the power of trying
- 01:12:33to get people into a more sleep deprived
- 01:12:36state if they've got insomnia it's
- 01:12:38interesting because much of what you
- 01:12:39said makes me think that we we all have
- 01:12:42our own sleep identity and when I say
- 01:12:45sleep identity I mean a story We Tell
- 01:12:48ourselves about our relationship with
- 01:12:49sleep and it makes me think that our
- 01:12:51sleep identity is much more powerful
- 01:12:53than I think we think cuz if you speak
- 01:12:54to anybody anybody in this room upstairs
- 01:12:57wherever and you say what do you like at
- 01:12:59sleeping they will deliver their sleep
- 01:13:00identity they'll say I'm a bad sleeper
- 01:13:03and I wonder how much of that is
- 01:13:04self-fulfilling because I I think I've
- 01:13:06always told myself that I'm a good
- 01:13:07sleeper and therefore I find sleep easy
- 01:13:10um and I've got friends who will say oh
- 01:13:12I'm a really bad sleeper and I'm
- 01:13:13wondering how much that's impacting
- 01:13:15their ability to sleep and or if they
- 01:13:17they even know objectively if they are
- 01:13:19actually a good or bad sleeper it's just
- 01:13:20this identity we've embodied do you do
- 01:13:23you see that a lot do you see that how
- 01:13:24someone sleep by density kind of
- 01:13:25determines how they actually sleep I
- 01:13:27think all of that is true undoubtedly uh
- 01:13:30and I think this comes back to the
- 01:13:31earlier bit of our conversation about
- 01:13:33sleep trackers because obviously sleep
- 01:13:35trackers reinforce that sleep identity
- 01:13:39whether whether they are 100% accurate
- 01:13:42or not um and so yes that would that
- 01:13:45sort of sleep identity would undoubtedly
- 01:13:47influence both those conscious and
- 01:13:49unconscious factors that give rise to
- 01:13:51sleep you know if you're a good sleeper
- 01:13:53and you've always been a good sleeper
- 01:13:54you don't worry about any of these
- 01:13:55things you probably don't even worry
- 01:13:57about any aspects of sleep hygiene you
- 01:13:58quite happily you know like you watch a
- 01:14:02horror movie in in in in bed before you
- 01:14:04drift off to sleep but for those
- 01:14:06individuals who are who are not um yes
- 01:14:10absolutely that that the way that you
- 01:14:11view sleep and your relationship with
- 01:14:13sleep is of fundamental importance it is
- 01:14:17again coming back to genes we know that
- 01:14:19there are undoubtedly genetic factors
- 01:14:22that influence whether or not you're
- 01:14:24likely to develop insomnia so again as
- 01:14:27with all aspects of sleep it's that
- 01:14:29combination of genetics environment and
- 01:14:32when I talk about environment I'm also
- 01:14:33talking about your own psychological
- 01:14:35internal environment I am the other
- 01:14:37thing I was think we talked about sleep
- 01:14:39happen here earlier on but it seems that
- 01:14:41a lot of people believe they have a
- 01:14:43deviated septum is it called deviated
- 01:14:44septum uh septum yeah septum yeah septum
- 01:14:47I've heard some people say that that's
- 01:14:49the reason that they can't sleep and
- 01:14:51they've gone off to get surgery to kind
- 01:14:52of correct the deviated septum
- 01:14:55MH what's your thoughts on that is that
- 01:14:58is that true because I wonder I'm like
- 01:15:00we can't all be being born broken with
- 01:15:02these deviated septums or whatever I
- 01:15:04think it's normal for us to have some
- 01:15:06asymmetry in our noses and a lot of
- 01:15:08people have a deviated septum septum as
- 01:15:10a result of having broken their nose for
- 01:15:12example um you know I'm a little bit
- 01:15:16suspicious about you know operations for
- 01:15:20that kind of thing unless there are very
- 01:15:22clear abnormalities that might be
- 01:15:25responsible for sleeping poorly so one
- 01:15:28of the major issues for example in sleep
- 01:15:31apnea is sleep apnea the obstruction is
- 01:15:34in the throat it's not in the nose and
- 01:15:36so uh issues with nasal congestion or
- 01:15:40difficulty breathing through the nose do
- 01:15:41not directly cause obstructive sleep
- 01:15:43apnea what they can do in some
- 01:15:45individuals is they can encourage them
- 01:15:47to people to breathe through their mouth
- 01:15:50and breathe with their mouths open which
- 01:15:53Alters the position of the jaw and
- 01:15:55create a bit more narrowing in the back
- 01:15:56of the throat so for some individuals
- 01:15:58who have very prominent nasal congestion
- 01:16:01at night and who have evidence of sleep
- 01:16:04apnea sorting out their nasal congestion
- 01:16:06and correcting a deviated septum may be
- 01:16:09one way of doing that there is
- 01:16:11undoubtedly a rational for sorting that
- 01:16:14out I think that there are probably
- 01:16:16quite a few individuals who are having
- 01:16:18unnecessary operations makes sense I um
- 01:16:22so we've got the cognitive behavioral
- 01:16:25therapy for insomnia as one cure we've
- 01:16:27got that extreme torch therapy that they
- 01:16:28did in Australia yeah we've got
- 01:16:32melatonin
- 01:16:33um magnesium people have mentioned
- 01:16:37magnesium so so anecdotally magnesium
- 01:16:40can help some individuals um and you
- 01:16:42know anecdotally also magnesium is a
- 01:16:44very good treatment as testified to by
- 01:16:47some of my patients for conditions like
- 01:16:50restus leg syndrome so restus leg
- 01:16:52syndrome is this sort of neurological
- 01:16:54disorder whereby people um and it's
- 01:16:58often associated with things like
- 01:16:59pregnancy or low iron levels but it's
- 01:17:02under genetic control as well people ex
- 01:17:05uh experience a number of different
- 01:17:07things so the first thing is that they
- 01:17:08get an urged to move at night um and
- 01:17:11it's typically at night rather than
- 01:17:13during the day often associated with
- 01:17:15unpleasant Sensations that if they try
- 01:17:17and keep still that sensation builds and
- 01:17:20builds and builds until they have to
- 01:17:21move that if they do move they get some
- 01:17:24transient relief and it's often
- 01:17:26associated with kicking at night in your
- 01:17:29sleep um it's very common very common in
- 01:17:32pregnancy um very common in people who
- 01:17:35are anemic and in people who've got
- 01:17:38problems with their kidneys but it's
- 01:17:40common in the general population as well
- 01:17:42and so uh for people with restus leg
- 01:17:45syndrome magnesium does sometimes help
- 01:17:47significantly and it what's it doing is
- 01:17:49relaxing us I don't think we actually
- 01:17:51know precisely what it's doing okay um
- 01:17:54when you look at an underslept brain so
- 01:17:56if I was sleep deprived what what would
- 01:17:59the difference in my regular sleep
- 01:18:01activity be what would you see would you
- 01:18:03see my brain is like not active would
- 01:18:06you see part of it not not active so we
- 01:18:09would see on a gross level on a sort of
- 01:18:11macro level we would see that your brain
- 01:18:14is prioritizing very deep sleep over um
- 01:18:18other stages of sleep at night on during
- 01:18:22the day if you're chronically sleep
- 01:18:23deprived using the techniques that we
- 01:18:26use in clinical practice you would see
- 01:18:28very little there is some increasing
- 01:18:32evidence that actually what is happening
- 01:18:34within our brains is that we are
- 01:18:38constantly showing little areas of our
- 01:18:40cerebral cortex the outer lining of our
- 01:18:42brain the bit of the brain that's
- 01:18:43responsible for our cognitive abilities
- 01:18:45for example that dip in and out of
- 01:18:48electrical silence what has been termed
- 01:18:50local sleep so that there are little
- 01:18:52islands of local sleep that are
- 01:18:54constantly occurring over our cerebral
- 01:18:56cortex whilst we're awake and as we get
- 01:18:59more and more sleep deprived and you
- 01:19:01know depending on how much we've used
- 01:19:03that particular bit of our brain those
- 01:19:05islands tend to get slightly um longer
- 01:19:09that the periods of Silence get longer
- 01:19:12and those islands become more widespread
- 01:19:15so we're constantly even if you and I
- 01:19:17are talking there are little areas that
- 01:19:18are brain that are constantly dipping in
- 01:19:20and out of sleep but if we're very sleep
- 01:19:22deprived actually that uh electrical
- 01:19:25Silence of our cerebral cortex gets more
- 01:19:28extensive and more widespread which is
- 01:19:31probably why or at least one of the
- 01:19:33reasons why we decline from a cognitive
- 01:19:37perspective when we are very sleep
- 01:19:39deprived okay so my okay interesting
- 01:19:42because okay so different little parts
- 01:19:44of my brain are doing little micro
- 01:19:46sleeps if I'm sleep deprived yes and
- 01:19:48that from a behavioral standpoint will
- 01:19:51show up in my day-to-day life as worse
- 01:19:54cognitive performance maybe less
- 01:19:56Focus um are there because I've always
- 01:20:00I've always wondered why on an unslept
- 01:20:02day I feel like I'm more emotional you
- 01:20:04know people say they attest to the fact
- 01:20:06that if someone's a little bit cranky
- 01:20:08they think oh they probably not slept
- 01:20:10last night there's that phrase isn't
- 01:20:11there like who woke up on the wrong side
- 01:20:13of the bed etc is is there a scientific
- 01:20:15basis for that so I don't think we can
- 01:20:17fully explain it I think that there are
- 01:20:20certainly the areas of the brain that
- 01:20:22are responsible for for for emotion and
- 01:20:24emotional cognition are more
- 01:20:26metabolically active and so may be more
- 01:20:28vulnerable to the effects of sleep
- 01:20:30deprivation I think um uh we it is
- 01:20:33likely that when you're sleep deprived
- 01:20:35there are some changes in terms of
- 01:20:37certain neurotransmitters within the
- 01:20:38brain that may exacerbate that um but
- 01:20:42what is very very clear is that that
- 01:20:44association between
- 01:20:46sleep mood anxiety levels is very very
- 01:20:50clear and in fact we see that for
- 01:20:51example in people with clinically
- 01:20:53significant anxiety or clinically
- 01:20:55significant depression that actually
- 01:20:57treating anxiety or depression in
- 01:20:59somebody who is sleep deprived or has
- 01:21:02insomnia is much more difficult that
- 01:21:05treating the insomnia in somebody who is
- 01:21:07anxious or depressed is much more
- 01:21:09difficult without addressing the anxiety
- 01:21:10and depression and so this is you know
- 01:21:12this is really significant not just on a
- 01:21:14day-to-day basis for all of us but also
- 01:21:16in in clinical medicine and clinical
- 01:21:19Psychiatry so jumping back to the point
- 01:21:21about when we're under slept certain
- 01:21:24parts of our brain are doing little
- 01:21:25micro sleeps it is fair to say that the
- 01:21:28phrase that you know we're half
- 01:21:31asleep there's some Merit to that yeah
- 01:21:34we may not be half asleep but we could
- 01:21:35be a thousandth asleep or a h hundredth
- 01:21:38asleep and you know this this idea that
- 01:21:41the brain can exist in different stages
- 01:21:44of sleep or wake at the same time by the
- 01:21:47way also extends to to the nighttime so
- 01:21:50for example in people who Sleepwalk who
- 01:21:52do really rather dramatic things and you
- 01:21:54know I've had I've seen patients for
- 01:21:56example who've driven in their sleep one
- 01:21:58patient who rode a motorbike in her
- 01:21:59sleep I've seen uh people do some
- 01:22:02incredibly complicated things like
- 01:22:04cooking a meal in their sleep all of
- 01:22:06these sleepwalking type events relate to
- 01:22:09the fact that certain parts of the brain
- 01:22:11are in very deep sleep whereas other
- 01:22:14parts of the brain actually demonstrate
- 01:22:15waking activity so the bits of the brain
- 01:22:19that are remain asleep are the frontal
- 01:22:21loes which are you know basically where
- 01:22:23our rational thinking where our decision
- 01:22:25making occurs and the parts of the brain
- 01:22:27that are responsible for memory uh part
- 01:22:29of the brain called the hippocampus
- 01:22:31whereas actually in these events there
- 01:22:34are other areas of the brain like the
- 01:22:35areas responsible for movement or Vision
- 01:22:38or emotion uh demonstrate waking
- 01:22:41activity both on an electrical basis but
- 01:22:44also on a metabolic basis as well why do
- 01:22:47we dream it's a big question isn't it
- 01:22:50it's such a big question the the short
- 01:22:51answer is I think we still don't know I
- 01:22:53think there are lots and lots of
- 01:22:55theories about why we dream that the um
- 01:22:59those range from uh dreaming sleep being
- 01:23:02fundamental for memory uh for
- 01:23:06reinforcing memories for regulation of
- 01:23:09our emotional memories and I think
- 01:23:11you've had Matthew Walker on previously
- 01:23:13you probably talked about this view that
- 01:23:17uh dreaming sleep is a sort of emotional
- 01:23:20Rehabilitation therapy yeah a form of
- 01:23:22emotional therapy there are you know one
- 01:23:25of the unanswered questions is for
- 01:23:27example why when we are born or when
- 01:23:29we're in our mother's womb we spend a
- 01:23:31third of our lives in REM sleep and yet
- 01:23:34and that drops off significantly as we
- 01:23:37get older uh to the point where by the
- 01:23:39time you know we are elderly we're doing
- 01:23:43very little REM sleep at all o o
- 01:23:46overnight so this kind of Rapid decline
- 01:23:49in the proportion and the amount of REM
- 01:23:51sleep that we are exhibiting um has been
- 01:23:55explained by some individuals as it
- 01:23:56being fundamental to the development of
- 01:23:59Consciousness for example so there's a
- 01:24:01chap called Hobson and who is uh based
- 01:24:04in one of the Ivy League colleges in the
- 01:24:06in the states who was um very keen on
- 01:24:09this idea that REM sleep is part of the
- 01:24:12de early development of Consciousness as
- 01:24:14we are as as as we are inside our
- 01:24:16mother's womb and may be fundamental
- 01:24:19subsequently to learning new things to
- 01:24:22learning new motor tasks the honest
- 01:24:24answer is I think that there's probably
- 01:24:26more than one function in fact many
- 01:24:28functions of REM sleep so REM sleep is
- 01:24:31the stage of sleep where we where we
- 01:24:32start to dream right so so REM sleep is
- 01:24:35the stage of sleep that we most
- 01:24:37associate with dreaming and it's the
- 01:24:39stage of sleep that is most associated
- 01:24:41with dreams of a narrative structure so
- 01:24:43these kinds of stories that evolve that
- 01:24:45have a plot but actually we know that
- 01:24:46lots of people dream in nonrem sleep as
- 01:24:49well and you can see that in for example
- 01:24:51people who Sleepwalk or have night
- 01:24:53terrors they will often very clearly be
- 01:24:56able to remember dreams um but those
- 01:25:00events will have Arisen from very deep
- 01:25:03non-re sleep so we do dream in other
- 01:25:06stages as well it feel it feels like
- 01:25:09it's not a great evolutionary trait to
- 01:25:11have nightmares like I can't understand
- 01:25:14the basis of having a nightmare and why
- 01:25:15that's a good thing you know I'm not
- 01:25:18sure that that we're evolutionally
- 01:25:20driven to have nightmares I think that
- 01:25:22what nightmares represent is the fact
- 01:25:25that we've had these kind of mental
- 01:25:28experiences but we've woken up to the
- 01:25:30extent that that nightmare has never
- 01:25:32been completed because usually we forget
- 01:25:36our dreams you know we all almost all of
- 01:25:38us go through four or five cycles of REM
- 01:25:42sleep a night and so we're probably
- 01:25:43having dreams throughout the night but
- 01:25:46you know most of us don't remember the
- 01:25:48vast majority of our dreams we remember
- 01:25:50the dreams whereby we've woken directly
- 01:25:52out of rem's sleep why is that why do we
- 01:25:55remember the Drey when we wake up um I
- 01:25:57think that's another unanswered question
- 01:25:59but it's quite clear that that rapid
- 01:26:01transition between REM sleep and wake
- 01:26:04means that the memory of whatever it is
- 01:26:06that we've been experiencing has not
- 01:26:07been fully cleansed has not been removed
- 01:26:11now that goes back to to Matthew
- 01:26:13Walker's theory of of of uh of REM of
- 01:26:17dreaming as a as an emotional therapy
- 01:26:20because you know the the argument is
- 01:26:22that if you've experienced something
- 01:26:23that is
- 01:26:24so strongly um driven by emotion you
- 01:26:29know you've had a very traumatic
- 01:26:31experience the one of the thing one of
- 01:26:33the reasons why you don't recover from
- 01:26:34that is because you are when you're
- 01:26:36dreaming about that event you will
- 01:26:39invariably wake up because the emotional
- 01:26:41content of that dream is so high which
- 01:26:43is why these kind of recurrent
- 01:26:45nightmares are part and parcel of
- 01:26:47post-traumatic stress disorder you're
- 01:26:48never completing that process and you're
- 01:26:51never allowing uh yourself to achieve
- 01:26:53emotional recovery from that original
- 01:26:57trauma so so one could argue under the
- 01:27:00theory that our dreams are therapy that
- 01:27:05it's our like subconscious mind playing
- 01:27:07through the scenario in order to maybe
- 01:27:09better understand it and process it and
- 01:27:10to come to peace with what happened
- 01:27:12maybe learn from it you know from an
- 01:27:13evolutionary perspective okay so if
- 01:27:16you've had a traumatic event say you
- 01:27:18were attacked by a lion you know out in
- 01:27:22out in the Wilds then obviously having a
- 01:27:25very very strong
- 01:27:27emotional association with the terror of
- 01:27:30being attacked by a lion is very
- 01:27:32important for you to avoid that again
- 01:27:34and to learn from that event yeah but
- 01:27:38what you don't want is you don't want
- 01:27:39the next time you see that lion to have
- 01:27:42such an strong emotional response to it
- 01:27:45that you can't do anything about it that
- 01:27:47you that you freeze because that's not
- 01:27:50very good for your survival so you want
- 01:27:52to learn from these very strong
- 01:27:54emotional events but you don't want that
- 01:27:56emotion to be heightened to the same
- 01:27:59extent that it was during that original
- 01:28:01experience so from an evolutionary
- 01:28:04perspective there is some rationale to
- 01:28:05that what's the um the most upsetting
- 01:28:10case of a sleep disorder that you've
- 01:28:12ever seen I mean I've seen a lot of very
- 01:28:14upsetting cases you know I've seen um
- 01:28:18individuals who have committed crimes in
- 01:28:22their sleep really um yeah um what kind
- 01:28:24of crimes so uh was involved with
- 01:28:27somebody who not in the UK I would
- 01:28:30stress who uh shot uh a family member in
- 01:28:34their sleep um I've uh seen individuals
- 01:28:38who have um um committed sexual assault
- 01:28:43in their sleep um but also rape uh yes I
- 01:28:48somebody who was convicted for rape in
- 01:28:51uh as a result of a sleep disorder now
- 01:28:53obviously you know one of the great
- 01:28:54difficulties is is that you can never be
- 01:28:58absolutely sure whether during that
- 01:28:59particular episode they were in their
- 01:29:04that that occurred during their sleep
- 01:29:06disorder but what you can certainly say
- 01:29:07with a degree of certainty is that there
- 01:29:09is clear evidence that they have
- 01:29:11exhibited similar things that have
- 01:29:13definitively occurred out of their sleep
- 01:29:16but but also some of the effects of
- 01:29:18these Sleep Disorders on people's lives
- 01:29:20is really dramatic so um I look after a
- 01:29:25large number of individuals with a
- 01:29:26condition called Klein Levin syndrome
- 01:29:28which is a very poorly understood
- 01:29:30condition that often affects young kids
- 01:29:32and teenagers and they will go through
- 01:29:36they'll be fairly normal between
- 01:29:38episodes and then during episodes they
- 01:29:41will be profoundly sleepy sometimes
- 01:29:43sleeping 23 24 hours a day when they're
- 01:29:46awake they're very confused they exhibit
- 01:29:49very abnormal behavior eating Behavior
- 01:29:51sexual behavior and that can last for
- 01:29:54days or weeks out of the blue which can
- 01:29:56have a massive impact on um people's
- 01:30:00education people's social lives you know
- 01:30:02how they're uh managing in the workplace
- 01:30:05so the these sorts of conditions can
- 01:30:07devastate people's
- 01:30:09lives in in the case of the person that
- 01:30:11killed somebody while they were
- 01:30:14asleep did they get convicted of that
- 01:30:18crime that is still in process U as I
- 01:30:21said it's not in the UK which is why I'm
- 01:30:22mentioning it um but you know there have
- 01:30:25been many examples of individuals who
- 01:30:28have um who have been found not guilty
- 01:30:32as a result of a crime including murder
- 01:30:36um having occurred in their sleep now as
- 01:30:39I said there is always a degree of
- 01:30:41uncertainty as to whether or not a
- 01:30:43particular event happened in sleep but
- 01:30:45what in those individuals we can say is
- 01:30:48that there are many individuals who
- 01:30:50exhibit similar sorts of patterns of
- 01:30:52behavior that have been clear
- 01:30:54uh demonstrated to arise from sleep what
- 01:30:58do you have to demonstrate in order to
- 01:31:00when that goes to court what are they
- 01:31:02looking at are they looking at your past
- 01:31:03sleep Behavior do they put you in a
- 01:31:05sleep laboratory and check I think I
- 01:31:07think both both of those things so you
- 01:31:09know first of all is past Behavior
- 01:31:12consistent with what has happened on
- 01:31:15that night in question um secondly are
- 01:31:18there any features about the event
- 01:31:19itself that suggest that there was an
- 01:31:22attempt to for example cover it up up or
- 01:31:25a degree of uh pre-planning in order to
- 01:31:28commit that particular act and also
- 01:31:31whether or not there can be uh evidence
- 01:31:35found by studying that individual's
- 01:31:38sleep that they suffer from these kinds
- 01:31:40of sleep
- 01:31:41disorders I am I read about the famous
- 01:31:43example of Kenneth Parks yes which is
- 01:31:46pretty unimaginable yes what is the
- 01:31:48story of Kenneth Parks so so Kenneth
- 01:31:50Parks uh was a uh chap who uh was based
- 01:31:54in Ontario um who um apparently uh in
- 01:31:59his sleep uh drove several miles to his
- 01:32:03parents in-law's house 23 km yeah uh
- 01:32:08long long way and apparently um got a um
- 01:32:13tire iron out of the boot of his car uh
- 01:32:15bludgeoned his mother-in-law to death
- 01:32:18and then tried to um kill his
- 01:32:20father-in-law and and and ended up
- 01:32:22throwing him into a swim sing pool um
- 01:32:25now it was this was made even more
- 01:32:29Curious by the fact that there had been
- 01:32:31some um evidence that he'd been having
- 01:32:34some financial difficulties and had had
- 01:32:37some discussions with his parents-in-law
- 01:32:38about um about financial issues but it
- 01:32:43was deemed by a court of law that this
- 01:32:46happened whilst he was sleepwalking and
- 01:32:49he was actually acquitted so this is a
- 01:32:51remarkable story um now is it impossible
- 01:32:56for somebody to drive in their sleep no
- 01:32:58I've seen it myself um uh it
- 01:33:01seems stretching credibility that
- 01:33:05somebody could have undertaken all of
- 01:33:07that whilst sleeping but you know in the
- 01:33:10courts of law he was found not guilty
- 01:33:12that's
- 01:33:14crazy have you ever seen someone Drive
- 01:33:16miles in their sleep yes yeah you know
- 01:33:18I've got I've got a a patient who I
- 01:33:20don't see anymore who I mentioned in my
- 01:33:22book who um has driven several miles in
- 01:33:26her sleep and in fact has driven a
- 01:33:27motorbike in her youth in her sleep and
- 01:33:30the only knowledge that she had was her
- 01:33:32land lady at the time said where were
- 01:33:34you going at 1:00 in the morning
- 01:33:35clutching your motorcycle helmet and
- 01:33:38she'd obviously been for a ride in the
- 01:33:39middle of the night without any
- 01:33:40recollection I think this goes back to
- 01:33:42what we were talking about which is you
- 01:33:44know are we half asleep are we a
- 01:33:46hundredth asleep are we a thousand
- 01:33:48asleep so in those kinds of situations
- 01:33:51it's likely that actually the majority
- 01:33:53of the brain is probably awake because
- 01:33:54it's very hard to envisage how somebody
- 01:33:56may be able to do something quite so
- 01:33:59complicated when the majority of their
- 01:34:01brain is asleep but crucially the parts
- 01:34:03of the brain that remain asleep are the
- 01:34:06bits that are responsible for rational
- 01:34:08thinking I mean why would she have gone
- 01:34:09for a motorcycle ride in the middle of
- 01:34:11the night uh if she was thinking
- 01:34:13rationally and also the bits of the
- 01:34:15brain that are responsible for memory I
- 01:34:18am a big Manchester United fan and I
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- 01:35:16description link below What proportion
- 01:35:18of people that are because there's
- 01:35:20various types of insomnia isn't there
- 01:35:22there's not just one type of inia
- 01:35:24um I read about this sort of short sleep
- 01:35:26duration insomnia and then in other
- 01:35:29insomniacs where they might be in bed
- 01:35:32for 8 hours and sleep for eight hours
- 01:35:33but they're not getting sufficient
- 01:35:35restorative sleep is that it so we we
- 01:35:40know that you know and going back to
- 01:35:42what I was saying about us being poor
- 01:35:44witnesses to our sleep the majority of
- 01:35:46individuals who have insomnia subjective
- 01:35:50insomnia when you bring them into a
- 01:35:51sleep lab they may be sleeping slight ly
- 01:35:54shorter than normal based upon tracking
- 01:35:57of their brain waves but probably don't
- 01:35:59sleep a huge amount less than normal
- 01:36:01individuals it's their subjective
- 01:36:03experience of sleep that is um impacted
- 01:36:07rather than the true duration of their
- 01:36:10sleep um those make up the majority of
- 01:36:13individuals with insomnia but there is a
- 01:36:15subgroup of individuals who say well you
- 01:36:17know I sleep 4 hours a night or 3 hours
- 01:36:20a night and they really do only sleep 2
- 01:36:22or 3 hours night now in those
- 01:36:25individuals who kind of have the feeling
- 01:36:27that they are sleeping very little what
- 01:36:30we are actually beginning to understand
- 01:36:32is that there are some again some local
- 01:36:35changes in the way that the brain acts
- 01:36:39so that there are areas of the brain for
- 01:36:41example that might be responsible for
- 01:36:43awareness that don't switch off to the
- 01:36:45same extent at the rest of the brain so
- 01:36:47whilst the majority of the brain may be
- 01:36:48sleeping those little areas of the brain
- 01:36:51that are responsible for our awareness
- 01:36:52at night what's going on in our
- 01:36:54environment may not be switching off to
- 01:36:56quite the same extent and so there's a
- 01:36:59sort of huge spectrum of what insomnia
- 01:37:02actually
- 01:37:03is what hope would you offer insomnia
- 01:37:05insomniacs because you know this video
- 01:37:08is going to draw in a lot of insomniacs
- 01:37:10it always does whenever we talk about
- 01:37:11sleeps when I look at the the comments
- 01:37:13and the feedback and the reviews Etc and
- 01:37:15it seems that insomniacs converge here
- 01:37:18looking for answers
- 01:37:20yeah so I would say that um the odds are
- 01:37:25in your favor that there are some very
- 01:37:27effective treatments for insomnia um
- 01:37:31that it's not always straightforward
- 01:37:34because insomnia interacts with a whole
- 01:37:36range of other conditions that may be
- 01:37:39affecting you like your mood like your
- 01:37:42anxiety levels like what's happened in
- 01:37:44in your past and sometimes it requires a
- 01:37:47multipronged approach but for the
- 01:37:50majority of individuals we can make
- 01:37:52sleep better you know one of the real
- 01:37:55big issues that a lot of people are
- 01:37:57seeking for Rapid or instant answers to
- 01:38:01their insomnia which is why a lot of
- 01:38:03people end up on drugs and that that may
- 01:38:06not necessarily be the right approach
- 01:38:08for you and I would really countenance
- 01:38:10that you know the treatment of an
- 01:38:12insomnia can in some individuals take
- 01:38:15some time um and it's important to have
- 01:38:17a degree of patience to try and fix this
- 01:38:19in the long term rather than to provide
- 01:38:21a short-term
- 01:38:22solution what sort of percentage of
- 01:38:24insomniax do you think recover well I
- 01:38:27think that if you extrapolate on the
- 01:38:29basis of CBT yeah CBT based approaches
- 01:38:32we know that helps about 80% of
- 01:38:34individuals really 80% yeah up to um and
- 01:38:38you know that that these drugs do help
- 01:38:42some individuals as I you know I would
- 01:38:44uh stipulate again I would stress that
- 01:38:47you know drugs are need to be used
- 01:38:49cautiously in the right individuals so
- 01:38:52you know as I said the odds are in your
- 01:38:53favor you wrote this book called um you
- 01:38:56know the secret world of sleep which is
- 01:38:59a real pioneering book on the subject of
- 01:39:01sleep but I also have this other book in
- 01:39:04front of me called The Man Who tasted
- 01:39:06words yeah and at the bottom of this
- 01:39:08book it says it's a fascinating
- 01:39:09important and disturbing
- 01:39:12book all of your work seems to Center on
- 01:39:15the weird way that the brain operates
- 01:39:17and its patterns and how that impacts
- 01:39:19our everyday lives but the man who
- 01:39:21tasted words why did you call the book
- 01:39:24The Man Who tasted words so one of the
- 01:39:28individuals in that book is a is an
- 01:39:30individual who is not a patient who
- 01:39:32doesn't have anything wrong with him
- 01:39:34he's got a condition called synesthesia
- 01:39:36which is the melding the the the
- 01:39:39combining of certain senses so when he
- 01:39:44sees objects or hears objects he gets a
- 01:39:49taste associated with them so he gives a
- 01:39:51really good example of his um
- 01:39:54you know in childhood his um friend had
- 01:39:57a girlfriend whose particular name in
- 01:39:59him gave him a awful taste and he every
- 01:40:02time he his friend mentioned this girl's
- 01:40:05name his mouth was filled with a a
- 01:40:08terrible taste so he will read words he
- 01:40:12will hear words and all of those words
- 01:40:14will be associated with a particular
- 01:40:15taste that has lasted his entire life
- 01:40:18and it's been very fixed so as a as a
- 01:40:21kid when he started reading he learned
- 01:40:23how to to read by looking at the tube
- 01:40:24map on the way to school and each of
- 01:40:27those tube stations has got a particular
- 01:40:29taste associated with it and that taste
- 01:40:32has remained fixed throughout his life
- 01:40:34now this sounds really very strange but
- 01:40:36actually we know that some degree of
- 01:40:38synesthesia some degree of melding of
- 01:40:40our uh of our uh senses is actually
- 01:40:44quite common that up to about 4% of
- 01:40:46individuals exhibit some form of
- 01:40:49synesthesia and it really I think
- 01:40:51illustrates how in all of us our minds
- 01:40:54and our brains and our nervous systems
- 01:40:57work in slightly different ways to
- 01:40:59Define our reality and it's an
- 01:41:03exploration of how our nervous system
- 01:41:06can influence how we perceive reality to
- 01:41:09be and that truth may not always be what
- 01:41:12we perceive there's another um patient
- 01:41:15in that not a patient another woman in
- 01:41:18that book who has synesthesia she's a
- 01:41:21musician and when she plays music
- 01:41:23she will see uh colors washing in and
- 01:41:27out of her vision um and so for her
- 01:41:30every time she hears a piece of music
- 01:41:33that will be accompanied by a a visual
- 01:41:35phenomenon sometimes even a sensory
- 01:41:37phenomenon so certain pieces of music or
- 01:41:40certain sounds will precipitate certain
- 01:41:42sensory
- 01:41:44experiences I've often heard you know
- 01:41:45you hear about Rainman and um various
- 01:41:48types of autism where these sort of
- 01:41:51apparent geniuses say that they
- 01:41:54see what do they say they say they do
- 01:41:57maths with like shapes in their brain MH
- 01:42:00I if you ask them what four plus4 is
- 01:42:02they describe that it kind of appears in
- 01:42:04front of them as a shape yes so so that
- 01:42:07is a form of synesthesia and we know
- 01:42:09that cesia is much more common in people
- 01:42:11with autistic Spectrum Disorder than it
- 01:42:12is in individuals without
- 01:42:15neurodevelopmental uh disorders what
- 01:42:18does this tell us about the nature of
- 01:42:20our experience you know on a for someone
- 01:42:22that's not you know um living with
- 01:42:26synesthesia does it does it mean that
- 01:42:30there is no such thing as truth I think
- 01:42:33what it tells us is that
- 01:42:36our our reality what we perceive truth
- 01:42:40to be is intimately linked with the
- 01:42:43structure and the function of our brains
- 01:42:46and whilst we all assume that people's
- 01:42:50experiences of the world and by the way
- 01:42:53the way that we interpret those
- 01:42:55experiences of the world are all
- 01:42:57identical that is very far from the
- 01:42:59truth and I think it gives us some
- 01:43:01insight given the fact that how we
- 01:43:05perceive reality even in the context of
- 01:43:08an entirely normal and entirely
- 01:43:11functioning nervous system is so
- 01:43:13predicated upon our experiences is so
- 01:43:17predicated on our model of the world
- 01:43:19that you know the brain works as a
- 01:43:21prediction system so it works by um
- 01:43:26assessing whether or not what our senses
- 01:43:28are telling us are in keeping with what
- 01:43:30our expectation of the world is so we
- 01:43:31need a model of the world as we
- 01:43:33understand it and that model of the
- 01:43:35world is influenced by our experiences
- 01:43:37by our genes by the structure and
- 01:43:38function of our brain so it's not
- 01:43:41necessarily surprising given that we all
- 01:43:43have very different experiences in life
- 01:43:45that we have different genes that we
- 01:43:46will have gone through different things
- 01:43:49that our truth may be very different
- 01:43:52from the truths of others and our
- 01:43:56experiences our perceptions of the
- 01:43:58reality of the world may be very
- 01:44:01different kind of explains why you know
- 01:44:04there's a lot of polarization and a lot
- 01:44:05of conflict to some degree I think it
- 01:44:08does I think you only need to have a
- 01:44:09look on Twitter to see how differently
- 01:44:12different people perceive exactly the
- 01:44:15same
- 01:44:19situation but also one might argue that
- 01:44:23you know if there's people who have
- 01:44:24entirely different perceptions of the
- 01:44:26world because of their brain and their
- 01:44:28nervous system
- 01:44:29that maybe they're not guilty of crimes
- 01:44:32that they've committed well I think
- 01:44:34that's the subject of the third book
- 01:44:36yeah seven deadly sins the biology of
- 01:44:38Being Human I had this debate with my
- 01:44:41friend the other day because I was
- 01:44:42reading about some studies I think it
- 01:44:44was um it was a study that showed a guy
- 01:44:47with a brain tumor had gone out and
- 01:44:50suddenly he was like a normal teacher
- 01:44:51and he' gone out and committed some
- 01:44:53horrific horrific crimes and when they
- 01:44:55remov the brain tumor from his head he
- 01:44:57stopped committing all these crimes and
- 01:45:00so the question becomes like is this
- 01:45:02person to blame for these crimes because
- 01:45:05but then you could obviously stretch
- 01:45:06that out further and just go when people
- 01:45:08are serial killers often times we find
- 01:45:10that there's something in their brain or
- 01:45:11there's some early trauma or there's you
- 01:45:13know there's some kind of neurological
- 01:45:15issue that they've had so are they are
- 01:45:16they guilty well indeed and you know and
- 01:45:19that's a really important question which
- 01:45:22is you know how much free will do all of
- 01:45:25us have if we are all um essentially
- 01:45:29machines that are doing the bidding of
- 01:45:30our brains than anything that affects
- 01:45:33our brain function defines our behavior
- 01:45:36and you know the the the book that is
- 01:45:38out in November very much discusses um
- 01:45:42the neurological and psychological
- 01:45:44conditions that can influence our
- 01:45:46behavior in really rather dramatic ways
- 01:45:49you know be that you know from the
- 01:45:51perspective of gluttony or wroth or
- 01:45:53Pride or any of the other uh seven
- 01:45:56deadly sins why why did you write this
- 01:45:58book this book Seven Deadly Sins because
- 01:46:01it again reflects some of my clinical
- 01:46:03practice that I see individuals who have
- 01:46:06brain conditions that dramatically
- 01:46:09influence their behavior now the
- 01:46:11question in always in my mind is well um
- 01:46:15firstly does this
- 01:46:17reflect their own morality and it's
- 01:46:19quite clear that in those individuals it
- 01:46:21doesn't but what are the implications
- 01:46:25for all of us and as you already said
- 01:46:27you know if that is the case for if a
- 01:46:29brain tumor can suddenly cause a
- 01:46:32dramatic change in Behavior if a stroke
- 01:46:34can if Parkinson's disease can if a
- 01:46:38chemical change and some of the people
- 01:46:39that I detail in the book are
- 01:46:41individuals who are very similar to
- 01:46:43patients of mine in whom I've started an
- 01:46:45anti-epileptic drug for example exhibit
- 01:46:47a dramatic change in their behavior and
- 01:46:51so a simple chemical Tak in tablet form
- 01:46:54can result in those changes of behavior
- 01:46:56what about all of us are there things in
- 01:46:58our environment are there things that we
- 01:46:59are doing that influence the
- 01:47:01machinations of our brains so do do
- 01:47:04these kinds of behaviors then take a a
- 01:47:06moral Viewpoint or should we be looking
- 01:47:10at them from a biological perspective
- 01:47:12rather than a moral one give me one such
- 01:47:14extreme Behavior where you've seen um
- 01:47:17some kind of chemical intervention or
- 01:47:18other intervention completely eradicate
- 01:47:20that behavior so I I've certain he seen
- 01:47:23a lot of individuals so you know I said
- 01:47:25at the start that one of the um
- 01:47:27specialist clinics I do is an epilepsy
- 01:47:29clinic and there are anti-epileptic
- 01:47:32drugs that are well known in a very
- 01:47:33small proportion of individuals to cause
- 01:47:37a dramatic increase in irritability
- 01:47:40anger and aggression and you know I
- 01:47:43remember one of the earliest patients
- 01:47:45that I saw started on this drug was a uh
- 01:47:48very frail little old lady who must have
- 01:47:51been in her 70s
- 01:47:53and who um was arrested by six police
- 01:47:56officers in her front garden um being
- 01:47:59pinned down because she was so so
- 01:48:01violent and aggressive so that's one
- 01:48:04example lots of patients who for example
- 01:48:07exhibit behavioral change after a
- 01:48:09seizure uh I've seen individuals who
- 01:48:12have had autoimmune conditions of their
- 01:48:14brain who have become frankly psychotic
- 01:48:17you know ripping um sinks off the wall
- 01:48:21in their hospital room trashing um the
- 01:48:24their hospital room attacking um their
- 01:48:28their nurses who actually when that
- 01:48:30condition is treated they've reverted to
- 01:48:32normality and in the case of the very
- 01:48:35angry grandmother who was uh kicking off
- 01:48:38at the police was she cured of thator
- 01:48:40the the drug was stopped and and she
- 01:48:42returned to normal the drug was stopped
- 01:48:45yes so it was took her off the took took
- 01:48:48her off the anti-epileptic drug and
- 01:48:49replaced it with another and and she
- 01:48:51normalized of all the um of all the
- 01:48:54extreme cases you've seen throughout
- 01:48:55your work and through these these books
- 01:48:57you've written about sleep and the seven
- 01:48:59deadly sins and the man who tasted
- 01:49:01words what is the
- 01:49:03um what is the most surprising crazy
- 01:49:08story that you've encountered that that
- 01:49:10show just how extreme and bizarre the
- 01:49:13human brain can be so I think probably
- 01:49:16um the one
- 01:49:19that sits with me in a mo in the most
- 01:49:22emotional way is probably a young man
- 01:49:25that I met who has never been able to
- 01:49:27feel pain um throughout his entire life
- 01:49:31from the moment that he was born and in
- 01:49:32fact he has a genetic disorder that was
- 01:49:35also inherited by two of his siblings
- 01:49:38and none of the three children have ever
- 01:49:41been able to experience pain now at
- 01:49:43first clance you kind of think oh that
- 01:49:44might be quite nice never to experience
- 01:49:46pain but meeting somebody like that and
- 01:49:48you realize quite how important pain is
- 01:49:52for our normal development for our
- 01:49:54normal lives you know he tells stories
- 01:49:57of him and his sisters essentially
- 01:50:00holding their hands up to the fire to
- 01:50:01hear the sizzling of their hands because
- 01:50:03they thought it was funny they didn't
- 01:50:05feel any pain they he would regularly
- 01:50:07jump off the roof of his garage in order
- 01:50:10to get attention because he knew that if
- 01:50:11he broke a limb he would end up in
- 01:50:13hospital being looked after by these
- 01:50:14nice nurses and there was no downside to
- 01:50:17it yet he is now you know terribly
- 01:50:21physically scarred doesn't really you
- 01:50:23know he has no comprehension of what
- 01:50:25pain is so there is that disconnect
- 01:50:28between The Human Experience of pain
- 01:50:30which is common to all of us and what he
- 01:50:33experiences and I think that he feels
- 01:50:35that that is very much a a barrier
- 01:50:37between him and understanding all the
- 01:50:39people around him but it's also resulted
- 01:50:41in him uh being terribly damaged by the
- 01:50:46inability to feel
- 01:50:48pain gosh it really does um perfectly
- 01:50:51highlight the role of of pain very much
- 01:50:54something all of us think we'd rather
- 01:50:56live without yes and then you see
- 01:50:58somebody who has never experienced pain
- 01:51:00and see the impact it has on them um I
- 01:51:03think it makes you appreciate it in a
- 01:51:05slightly different way is there anything
- 01:51:07else pain oh load I mean so much you
- 01:51:10know um there are you know one one woman
- 01:51:13who lost her vision as a result of
- 01:51:16multiple operations to her eye who sees
- 01:51:18visual hallucinations everywhere she
- 01:51:20goes um you know I think that very much
- 01:51:23illustrates uh the fact that our brain
- 01:51:26even when it's starved of inputs creates
- 01:51:29its own inputs because it's so eager to
- 01:51:31experience the world um you know
- 01:51:34individuals in whom is she okay she
- 01:51:37what's her experience so so she has um
- 01:51:41lost her vision entirely and sees
- 01:51:45sometimes rather scary hallucinations as
- 01:51:48a result of that loss of vision um you
- 01:51:51know what's really fascinating about her
- 01:51:54is that when she was asked by a a doctor
- 01:51:57whether or not she wouldd want those
- 01:51:59treated because there are some things
- 01:52:00that we can do to try and improve those
- 01:52:03she had to think very long and hard
- 01:52:05about it because she said look you know
- 01:52:07at least I'm seeing something now
- 01:52:08whether that is real or not there is a
- 01:52:11comfort to seeing something and in the
- 01:52:14end decided that she didn't want it
- 01:52:16treated she'd rather live with the
- 01:52:19hallucinations what else sorry I
- 01:52:21interrupted so
- 01:52:23um individuals who have lost their sense
- 01:52:26of smell or lost their sense of taste
- 01:52:28now you know you kind of think well I
- 01:52:31could live without my sense of smell
- 01:52:34probably it wouldn't be as quite a rich
- 01:52:36a world as I would as I would like but
- 01:52:39actually the implications of losing your
- 01:52:41sense of smell both in terms of um
- 01:52:45memory you know you think how important
- 01:52:46smell is for memory for those sort of
- 01:52:48emotional memories that we have you know
- 01:52:51smelling your your your mother's perfume
- 01:52:54or a particular meal and taking you back
- 01:52:57directly to Childhood and the impact of
- 01:52:59smell on emotion on your mood on uh you
- 01:53:03know depression is really
- 01:53:05underappreciated until you look at
- 01:53:08individuals who have lost their sense of
- 01:53:09smell and that was particularly
- 01:53:11important over covid because a lot of
- 01:53:12people were um losing their sense of
- 01:53:14smell as parts of covid and didn't know
- 01:53:17whether or not they would ever get their
- 01:53:18sense of smell back so all of our senses
- 01:53:21and they were depressed
- 01:53:23and they were depressed and you know it
- 01:53:24is very clearly associated with with um
- 01:53:28changes in mood uh smell and mood are
- 01:53:31very closely linked um you know if you
- 01:53:34think about some of the other um sensors
- 01:53:38so hearing so people who experience
- 01:53:40auditory hallucinations or you know in
- 01:53:43in in in the man who tasted words
- 01:53:44actually I was very kindly uh Bill Odie
- 01:53:47agreed to talk to me and bill has been
- 01:53:49experiencing musical hallucinations for
- 01:53:52many many many years so everywhere he
- 01:53:54goes in his house he will hear a
- 01:53:56soundtrack of of music and you know what
- 01:53:58the implications of of that are um what
- 01:54:02what's the implication so so initially
- 01:54:04he thought he was going slightly mad he
- 01:54:06thought that actually well first of all
- 01:54:08he thought that his neighbors were
- 01:54:10playing radio very very loudly and then
- 01:54:11he thought he was going slightly crazy
- 01:54:13but actually it turned out that one of
- 01:54:15the reasons why he was experiencing
- 01:54:17musical hallucinations was because he
- 01:54:19was losing his hearing anyway and so you
- 01:54:22know it goes back to the fact that when
- 01:54:23the brain is starved of inputs it
- 01:54:25creates its own experiences because it's
- 01:54:27eager to experience life um but also the
- 01:54:31the the the counter side to that is that
- 01:54:34this association between hearing loss
- 01:54:36and cognitive decline that actually you
- 01:54:40know it's important to look after your
- 01:54:41hearing because it provides important
- 01:54:45inputs that maintain the health and the
- 01:54:47Integrity of our brains so there are
- 01:54:50lots of these aspects of that you can
- 01:54:52take from Clinical medicine and apply
- 01:54:55them to what it tells us about ourselves
- 01:54:57and how our own brains work how has it
- 01:54:59changed you meeting all these people and
- 01:55:01doing all this work because it it can't
- 01:55:04be easy at times it must have had left
- 01:55:08sort of fingerprints on you in some sort
- 01:55:09of way look I think the problem is that
- 01:55:12particularly when you're sitting in a
- 01:55:14busy NHS Clinic where you've got a very
- 01:55:17limited amount of time to see people is
- 01:55:19you're often very much focused on the
- 01:55:22the problem that is sitting in front of
- 01:55:24you and by problem I mean the issue the
- 01:55:26medical issue that is affecting that
- 01:55:29individual uh whereas writing these
- 01:55:32books and talking to these patients I
- 01:55:34think has given me much broader
- 01:55:37appreciation of you know what it is that
- 01:55:40we are actually doing so in you know in
- 01:55:42the NHS you kind of yes you see well
- 01:55:45look I'm treating that I'm diagnosing
- 01:55:47that I'm maybe curing that but actually
- 01:55:50you see the much wider implic ations on
- 01:55:53those individuals when you are
- 01:55:55addressing their stories their
- 01:55:58experiences in a much broader way you
- 01:56:00see the impacts on their families and
- 01:56:02the the people around them yeah and that
- 01:56:05stuff stays with you
- 01:56:07undoubtedly how do you take care of
- 01:56:09yourself to make sure that that stuff
- 01:56:10doesn't um the honest answer is not very
- 01:56:13well really no I mean you know look I I
- 01:56:16try and uh have downtime and I try and
- 01:56:19get away and get out of London um but I
- 01:56:22think you know this is something that
- 01:56:23everybody in the NHS is currently facing
- 01:56:25everybody is feeling very very burnt out
- 01:56:28do you sleep well
- 01:56:32sometimes we have a closing tradition
- 01:56:34where the last guest leaves a question
- 01:56:35for the next guest not knowing who
- 01:56:37they're leaving it for okay and the
- 01:56:38question left for you is what is the
- 01:56:41most difficult decision you ever had to
- 01:56:43make and how did
- 01:56:45it benefit you oh
- 01:56:49God I think there's lots of ways to
- 01:56:51answer that question isn't it
- 01:56:52what came to mind well I think the uh
- 01:56:55the
- 01:56:57um I can think of you know clinical
- 01:57:00situations where I've had to make very
- 01:57:02difficult decisions about whether or not
- 01:57:04to treat somebody or not to treat
- 01:57:06somebody to whether or not to
- 01:57:09um whether or not to give up on somebody
- 01:57:12or whether or not to to continue working
- 01:57:15you know the sorts of situations like
- 01:57:17cardiac arrests which all doctors have
- 01:57:19to face um personal decisions
- 01:57:22um you know I think certainly making the
- 01:57:25decision to study medicine um was a an
- 01:57:29important fork in the road for me
- 01:57:32because you know medicine brings with it
- 01:57:35lots of amazing things and amazing
- 01:57:38experiences and we see through windows
- 01:57:41on life that very few other people get
- 01:57:44to see but it comes with it with it
- 01:57:47quite a lot of responsibilities and
- 01:57:50implications in terms of the future
- 01:57:52direction of your life so I think there
- 01:57:54are different ways to answer that thank
- 01:57:57you guy you write such interesting books
- 01:57:59in such interesting ways and they're all
- 01:58:00absolutely fascinating so usually I'd
- 01:58:02recommend one of them but I have to
- 01:58:03highly recommend all of them I'm going
- 01:58:04to link all of them Below in the
- 01:58:05description um seven deadly sins the
- 01:58:08biology of Being Human I've got the man
- 01:58:10who tasted words inside the strange and
- 01:58:12startling world of our senses and The
- 01:58:14Secret World of sleep all of them will
- 01:58:16be linked below um the seven deadly sins
- 01:58:18book is not out until November 21st I
- 01:58:21believe so um you can probably pre-order
- 01:58:23that now can interested in getting that
- 01:58:25so check out the the description below
- 01:58:26all of the books are linked there and
- 01:58:28thank you so much such a fascin pleasure
- 01:58:30talking to you
- 01:58:34[Music]
- 01:58:52ah
- sleep disorders
- Kenneth Parks
- neurology
- insomnia
- sleep apnea
- dreaming
- weight gain and sleep
- sleep therapy
- glymphatic system
- behavioral neuroscience