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Alcohol May Interfere with the Body's Ability to Regulate Sleep

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Drinking alcohol affects the body's sleep-regulating mechanism, causing insomnia over time, according to a recent study.

Researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine found that alcohol interferes with the brain's built-in system for regulating a person's need for sleep.

Alcohol is known to be a powerful sleep inducer, and approximately 20 percent of the adult population in the United States drink alcohol to help fall asleep. The researchers, led by Mahesh Thakkar, associate professor and director of research in the MU School of Medicine's Department of Neurology, studied alcohol's effects on sleep for more than five years.

"The prevailing thought was that alcohol promotes sleep by changing a person's circadian rhythm -= the body's built-in 24-hour clock," Thakkar said. "However, we discovered that alcohol actually promotes sleep by affecting a person's sleep homeostasis -- the brain's built-in mechanism that regulates your sleepiness and wakefulness."

Sleep homeostasis balances the body's need for sleep in relation to how long a person has been awake. If an individual loses sleep, the body produces adenosine, a naturally occurring sleep-regulating substance that increases a person's need for sleep. When a person goes to sleep early, sleep homeostasis is shifted and he or she may wake up in the middle of the night or early morning. The researchers found that alcohol alters the sleep homeostatic mechanism and puts pressure on an individual to sleep. When this happens, the sleep period is shifted, and a person may experience disrupted sleep.

"Based on our results, it's clear that alcohol should not be used as a sleep aid," Pradeep Sahota, an author of the study, said in a statement. "Alcohol disrupts sleep and the quality of sleep is diminished. Additionally, alcohol is a diuretic, which increases your need to go the bathroom and causes you to wake up earlier in the morning."

Researchers also explored how alcohol withdrawal affects sleep. The investigators found that after extended periods of frequent drinking, subjects would fall asleep as expected, but would wake within a few hours and would be unable to fall back asleep. When the subjects were not given alcohol, the researchers found that subjects showed symptomatic insomnia.

"During acute alcohol withdrawal, subjects displayed a significant increase in wakefulness with a reduction in rapid eye movement and non-rapid eye movement sleep," Thakkar said. "This caused insomnia-like symptoms and suggests an impaired sleep homeostasis."

The researchers hope to use the results to explore other effects of alcohol consumption.

The findings are detailed in the international biomedical journal Alcohol.

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