Can Exercise Improve Your Sleep
The fact of the matter is that for many people, getting quality sleep, let alone fall asleep in the first place, is much harder than we think. Exercise is great for a host of health benefits, such as improving heart health with cardio and HIIT, to improving overall strength with resistance training.
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This, along with the lack of light, signals the body to increase the sleep-inducing hormone melanin. People struggling to sleep can use exercise as a way to actively increase body temperature in hopes to drive this signal. On top of that, a byproduct of burning more energy with exercise is raising levels of adenine, another hormone responsible for making you feel tired and sleepy. Another pesky thing that inevitably makes it harder to sleep is age. With age, the responses to sleep signals and the circadian cycle slows down. As we saw, exercise can help with that silly circadian guy and it does not discriminate with age.
In fact, a 6-month long study of elderly individuals partaking in a resistance training program not only saw a 38% improvement in sleep quality based on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, but the folks even saw an awesome 52% increase in upper body strength. Sleep better AND open pickle jars easier? That… that’s a win-win! Oh, and in case exercise alone is not good enough as you grow older, another study showed that engaging in weight training, walking, and more social activities improved sleep for older individuals better than doing any of the three alone. And for people that have the most trouble sleeping, like people with chronic insomnia, exercise has undoubtedly shown to improve sleep.
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They even felt less sleepy during the early hours of the day! This is even more true for people with insomnia, as studies showed that low intensity exercises are much more effective than higher intensity. And the time you exercise matters, too. When you exercise in the morning, and especially outdoors, you’ll come in contact with more sunlight, which is a signal to the circadian cycle to increase wakefulness and lower sleep-inducing melanin levels. That means by working out early, you’ll feel more energetic throughout your day. Other studies have shown that you can also benefit from working out in the afternoon because at this time, you will be at your strongest. And you might have heard that working out at night will make your sleep worse, but luckily, that’s not true.
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So head to the gym, the park, the dance class, the garage, wherever you might be working out, and go get your gain and get your sleep. Good lifting and good night.
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