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Is it possible to make up on lost sleep? I've been told it can't be done.
Is it possible to make up on lost sleep? I've been told it can't be done.
No, you can not make up for prolonged periods of sleep loss. Chronic deprivation can be damaging, both physically and mentally, but the body will often adapt to get by with less sleep, rather than make up for the lost hours that have accumulated. Due to this, cognitive function and performance will be sacrificed.
so if it can't be made up, what's can be done to reduce the damage of sleep loss?
so if it can't be made up, what's can be done to reduce the damage of sleep loss?
Sleep rebound does take place (and can last for years in the case of alcoholism REM-deprivation), but its really important to get the amount of sleep you need on a day-to-day basis. In other words, sleep debt is not relieved very well, and the effectiveness of catching up on missed sleep decays the more days you are sleep deprived in a row. its funny that I read this thread while taking a short break between working on a sleep deprivation project ( http://i.imgur.com/hW47A.png )
Not in drug-related incidences, as I previously stated. but yes, you're right, sleep homeostasis is generally a short-term thing.
a fellow researcher told me (in think-tanking session). I could look it up, though. one caveat is that this applies to alcoholics, not casual use. some college students might qualify, though.
Godwin said the brain adapts to long-term alcohol use and doesn't immediately return to normal when alcohol use is stopped. It may take months for the brain to revert to normal sleep patterns, or it may never return to a truly normal state. In the meantime, sleep problems can get worse. Insomnia has been shown to occur in 36 percent to 72 percent of alcoholic patients during both active drinking and withdrawal.
So, apparently, one of the reasons alcoholics struggle to prevent relapse is because alcohol helps them sleep. I can't find anything that says that they will make up for sleep loss incurred during their alcoholism, though."There is a significant relationship between alcoholics returning to consumption because of this sleep issue," said Godwin, an associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy. "One reason they may go back to drinking may be an attempt to make their sleep feel more normal or satisfying."