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LifeCare
330-454-2000
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Sleep and Exercise

We all know that exercising regularly is part of a healthy lifestyle, but did you know that when you exercise can impact how you sleep?

Regardless of when you schedule your exercise regimen, incorporating a workout into your day has many health benefits: reduced stress, weight control, and disease prevention. There is no one optimum time to exercise, as a morning workout has different benefits then an afternoon workout. The National Sleep Foundation studied how exercising at different times can impact your sleep and discovered the following:

AM cardio may mean more deep sleep. When you sleep at night, your blood pressure naturally dips by about 10 to 20 percent. That reduction is good for your heart, and may be one way that your body restores itself when you sleep. Some people with sleep apnea don’t experience this nighttime drop in blood pressure, and, in general, it’s linked with lower sleep quality. An early morning sweat session may provide the ideal blood pressure reduction, as well as maximize deep sleep, compared with midday or evening workouts.

Strength training at any time of day may improve sleep. Lifting weights at different times of day doesn’t seem to affect nighttime blood pressure or the amount of time spent in different sleep stages. But there are a couple of key differences. Those who pump iron in the a.m. tend to fall asleep faster than those who work out later in the day. And those who prefer to do their bench presses or bicep curls at night wake up less frequently during the night and sleep better overall, compared with people who work out earlier in the day. The bottom line: Grab those weights whenever it works best for your day, and you’ll snooze better for it.

Hard workouts might keep you up at night. An all-out workout is about as far from a calming bedtime routine as it gets. It raises your body temperature, speeds up your heart rate, and stimulates your nervous system. Exercising intensely too close to bed, for some people, can lead to interrupted sleep. But for other people, even vigorous exercise just two hours before bedtime has no negative effects on their sleep. One way of thinking about it: An evening workout could raise your body temperature similarly to a warm bath. Just like your body cools off post-bath, making you feel sleepy, a post-workout cooling may also help to set the stage for sleep. The bottom line: Experiment with working out at different times of the day and track your sleep patterns to see which camp you fall into.

Sleeping in can take a toll on your workout regimen (which takes a toll on your sleep). It may seem obvious, but sleeping too late has a tendency to shrink exercise time. For every hour that you hit snooze past 7:30 am, there’s a significant drop in physical activity. And being less active means worse sleep in the night ahead—a negative cycle. That’s one more reason to commit to a regular bedtime that allows you to get the sleep that you need—and get up energized to work out the next day.