Sleep Loss
Sleep Loss - most related articles:
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Meditation Kriya Yoga an effective treatment for insomnia - 5.1
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American adults may not get enough rest or sleep - 4.7
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Inadequate sleep may lead to depression - 4.5
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Better sleep = better academic performance, math scores - 4.4
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Sleep gets better with age, better sleep in older - 4.4
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Children's sleep duration can influence their weight, behavior - 4.3
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Wives' inability to fall asleep at night has interpersonal consequences in marriage - 4.3
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Poor sleep leads to health and behavior problems in young diabetics - 4.3
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Obesity linked to reduced sleep, technology use, caffeine - 4.2
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ADHD linked to inadequate sleep - 4.1
Sleep Loss articles
Wives' inability to fall asleep at night has interpersonal consequences in marriageThe quality of interactions among married couples is affected by wives' inability to fall asleep at night, but not by husbands' sleep problems, suggests new research presented in Minneapolis, Minn., at SLEEP 2011, the 25th Anniversary Meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies LLC (APSS). Results show that, among wives, taking longer to fall asleep at night predicted their reports of more negative and less positive marital interactions the next day.
Good sleep and less stress better for weight lossA new Kaiser Permanente study found that people trying to lose at least 10 pounds were more likely to reach that goal if they had lower stress levels and slept more than six hours but not more than eight hours a night.
Sleep loss may increase Alzheimer's diseaseNeurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease often disrupt sleep. The new researches indicate that sleep loss could play a role in the genesis of such disorders.
Obesity linked to reduced sleep, technology use, caffeineAccording to a research presented at SLEEP 2009, the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, adolescent obesity is associated with having less sleep.
Less sleep associated with high blood pressureMiddle-aged adults who sleep fewer hours appear more likely to have high blood pressure and to experience adverse changes in blood pressure over time, according to a report in the June 8 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
American adults may not get enough rest or sleepAbout 10 percent of adults report not getting enough rest or sleep every day in the past month, according to a new four-state study released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
6 Sleep Loss articles listed above.
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