Don't stay up late, and set an alarm! Sleeping right key to a healthy heart An irregular sleep pattern is linked to a host of cardiovascular risks, including obesity, high blood pressure
Health News: Fit marathon runner who is not victim to hypertension, diabetes or smoking, suffers a cardiac arrest early morning at the gym. The only high risk factor found in his medical history was lack of sleep.According to a recent statement from the American Heart Association, an irregular sleep pattern (one that varies from the usual seven-to-nine hour sleep norm) is linked to a host of cardiovascular risks, including obesity, high blood pressure, diabetes, and coronary artery disease. Short sleep — less than six hours per night — appears to be hazardous to your heart health. Sleep-deprived people have higher blood levels of stress hormones and substances that induce inflammation, a key player in cardiovascular disease called CRP.Usually, 10 pm to 3 am is when the body repairs itself and when you miss sleeping during these golden hours, oxidative damage from stress, pollution and diet goes unrepaired, which leads to increased insulin resistance, carcinogenesis, brain strokes and heart attacks.Insufficient sleep may also lead to obesity. "Short sleepers" tend to snack more and eat more food in general. Insufficient sleep may impair various brain reward systems, including those that govern energy intake, judgment, and choice of food.