Yes, you CAN sleep like a baby: The surprising reasons for your sleep problems...and the secrets of successful snoozing

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By Laura Topham


Sleep problems are not just tiring and frustrating, they can also cause health problems, raising the risk of heart disease and stroke, according to a study recently published in the European Heart Journal.

So what are the causes of nightmares, teeth-grinding, restlessness and early waking? There are 89 different sleep disorders.

And here, with the help of experts, we examine ten of the most common and explain how to tackle them.



Sleep problems include tossing and turning, grogginess on waking, daytime tiredness, waking in the night and nightmares, but there are remedies...

Tossing and turning

Likely cause: You’re probably too hot.
‘Our bodies follow a strong natural rhythm, rising in temperature through the day and falling overnight,’ explains Dr Neil Stanley, a sleep expert.

‘At around 3am we have the biggest dip and anything that makes it difficult for us to lose heat at that point will cause disturbed sleep.’

One problem is central heating. ‘Although people set their central heating to 21 degrees because that’s comfortably warm, our bedroom feels very hot and we become restless, moving around to try and cool down.’

Women also tend to be more restless at night during menopause and their menstrual cycle because their body temperature rises.

What you can do:
‘The temperature under the covers should be around 29 degrees,’ says Dr Stanley.

‘Given enough time you will heat your bed up to the right temperature because you are always burning calories, which generates heat. On a cold night your body has to work harder, so people use electric blankets or hot-water bottles — but you can overheat your bed.

‘Make sure the bedroom is about 16 degrees because you need to lose temperature out of your head.’ So let your room cool by turning the heating off in the evening or opening a window.

Grogginess on waking

Likely cause: A change of routine or oversleeping.
‘The body craves regularity and wants to get up at the same time every day. It prepares for waking an hour
beforehand,’ says Dr Stanley. ‘But it can only prepare if it knows when you’re going to get up.

‘So if you usually wake up at 7am during the week, then at 6am your body sets the wheels in motion so you can leap out of bed.’

Our natural body clock ensures hormone production is timed for waking. For example, an anti-diuretic hormone rises during the night to control urine production so your sleep isn’t disturbed by needing to go to the loo.

Your gastric juices kick-start your appetite in the morning, adds Professor Kevin Morgan, of the Sleep Research Centre at Loughborough University. But if your routine is disturbed, for instance because you lie in at the weekend, your body has to catch up on all this when you wake.

The same happens on a Monday morning after a sleep-heavy weekend as the early start isn’t expected.

What you can do:
The solution is as simple as sticking to a pattern and not sleeping in at weekends. ‘This will help synchronise with your body’s natural rhythms and also prevent the feeling of “sleep drunkenness”, where you over sleep and don’t feel good afterwards,’ says Prof Morgan.

Walking/talking in your sleep
Likely cause: Alcohol, medication, genetics or having something on your mind can all trigger these night time activities, known as parasomnia.
‘Everyone is capable of sleepwalking or talking,’ explains Dr Stanley. ‘The conscious part of your brain can be deeply asleep while other bits, such as the area controlling movement and navigation, are still awake.’

The problem can run in families, but it can also be triggered in anyone when sleep is partially disturbed, meaning part of their brain is awake.

One trigger is alcohol, which lightens sleep. Parasomnia is also common in children as their nervous system is still developing. It can also be brought on by medications, such as some antidepressants, or by different drugs interacting.

What you can do:
Some parasomnias, such as talking, are often harmless. Others, such as having sex while asleep (most prevalent in young men) may be more problematic.
Sleep- walking can be especially dangerous.

The advice is to try to work out the triggers which disturb full sleep (such as alcohol), check side-effects of medication with your GP and check if the problem runs in your family.

Daytime tiredness
Likely cause: If you’ve had sufficient sleep, tiredness may be a result of weight gain (leading to sleep apnoea) or anxiety, which disrupt sleep without you realising it.
‘Sleep apnoea is a prevalent condition which affects 2 to 4 per cent of the population,’ says sleep nurse Rebecca Mullins. ‘It is common in the overweight, particularly men with large collar sizes.’

As they sleep, sufferers’ airways start to collapse and they can stop breathing for anything from ten to 60 seconds. Their oxygen levels drop so low the brain wakes them and they start breathing again with a snore.

‘Sufferers are not usually aware of the problem, but they don’t get refreshing sleep,’ says Mullins.

Another cause is anxiety. Dr Stanley says: ‘This makes sleep lighter and reduces the amount of deep sleep, the most restful part.

‘Some people accept feeling sleepy during the day as being their natural state, but nothing could be further from the truth — sleepiness isn’t natural.

‘If you’ve had a good night’s sleep you should feel brilliant. Unexplained tiredness during the day is always indicative of something.’ Other causes are chronic disease and teeth grinding.

What you can do:
‘If week after week you feel sleepy, then something is going on you need to look at,’ says Dr Stanley, who suggests speaking to your doctor.

Waking in the nightLikely cause: Intermittent waking without obvious cause is probably due to changes in your environment, stress or age. ‘From an evolutionary point of view, you could only sleep well if you felt safe and secure,’ says Dr Stanley. ‘So anything that stops this will disturb your sleep.’

We sleep in cycles and wake very briefly at the end of each cycle, but usually only vaguely recollect this. However, if you have something on your mind or are attentive to the environment, you will become more awake at that point.

Also, as we get older we wake up more easily. ‘Throughout adulthood your sleep becomes progressively lighter and more fragmented,’ says Prof Morgan. ‘This is because of changes in the nervous system and hormones.’

What can you do:
Rebecca Mullins says: ‘Avoid drinks as these fill the bladder. Don’t eat late as your body will still be digesting.’

Waking too earlyLikely cause: Depression-induced insomnia or your environment are the usual triggers. ‘Everyone thinks insomnia is not being able to fall asleep, but there are three types — not being able to fall asleep, waking up and waking too early,’ says Dr Stanley. ‘The latter is one of the classic signs of depression, though no one knows why.’ Changes in your environment can also wake you too early, as we wake easily in the morning anyway as sleep becomes lighter.

‘You almost certainly won’t wake up for the first three hours of night as you are deeply asleep,’ says Dr Stanley. ‘But later sleep is much lighter and more prone to be disturbed by noises.’

What you can do:‘The big caveat is that if you feel fine during the day then whatever’s happening isn’t a problem,’ says Dr Stanley. If you think the issue is insomnia, speak to your doctor.

Teeth-grindingLikely cause: Known as bruxism, teeth-grinding varies from jaw clenching to ferocious grinding that wears teeth down to stumps. It is usually due to genetics or stress. ‘There’s nothing serious underlying teeth grinding,’ says Dr Stanley. ‘Though it can be caused by stress, it is often just due to genetics.’

What you can do:
‘Treatment is important, as people who grind their teeth have dental problems but also tension headaches,’ says Dr Stanley.

Usual treatment is a gum shield, though some people grind through these. If teeth-grinding is caused by stress, then the cause should be addressed.

NightmaresLikely cause: Stress may be a factor, but otherwise they are a random occurrence. ‘Nightmares are luck of the draw,’ says Dr Stanley. ‘We all dream four or five times a night, but only remember them if we wake up during or just after them. So we are all probably having disturbing dreams and just not remembering them.’

What you can do:
People often associate nightmares with stress, which then makes them more anxious.

‘If you’re stressed and have a scary dream, you put them together and everything seems worse,’ says Dr Stanley.

Although stress can cause you to wake up more, remember we all have bad dreams all the time. Try to improve your sleep so you wake up less often.

Sleeping too muchLikely cause: A common cause of hypersomnia is disease. ‘Lots of people with long-term conditions tend to sleep longer,’ says Professor Francesco Cappuccio, a sleep expert at the University of Warwick. ‘It is a marker of ill health.’

This also occurs in the chronic stage of long-term depression (while the early stages are characterised by insomnia).

What you can do:
Tell your doctor. ‘Long sleep could be a marker for your GP,’ says Prof Cappuccio. ‘Unfortunately, doctors never ask how many hours you sleep — but problems can be picked up from that.

‘If someone sleeps too much, they may have a health problem.’ Though we all have our own sleep need, you should take notice if you’re sleeping significantly more over a prolonged period, napping during the day or have trouble waking up.

Can’t sleep until lateLikely cause: If you find you don’t want to go to bed until very late at night and you then struggle to get up in the morning, this could be due to a late natural body clock. ‘Everyone has an internal biological clock,’ says Prof Cappuccio. ‘But this clock is not exactly 24 hours — it is between 23 and 25, which can make us morning or night people.’

People with a late clock have the propensity to go to bed a bit later every day. However, this internal timing interacts with external cues, such as light, to synchronise with the day.

But left without these clues, for instance bright light at night, you would become mismatched with the day, says Prof Cappuccio.

‘There is also another sleep/wake cycle regulated by light,’ he adds. ‘Melatonin is a hormone that sends you to sleep and this increases when the brain perceives that it is night. When it’s daylight, melatonin is shut down and we wake up.’

However, for some people getting up late or early is simply learned behaviour that can be changed.

What you can do:
Turn down main lights before bed and use a lamp. If possible, let daylight wake you.


Source:Dailymail

The supersize epidemic: EVERY ambulance service in country forced to buy special kit to deal with obesity crisis

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By Daily Mail Reporter



Obese patients are forcing bosses to revamp their ambulances with equipment such as £4,500 hoists

Every ambulance service in the country has spent thousands of pounds on special equipment to move obese people, it emerged today.

Wider stretchers, cushions and hoists have been purchased to cope with bigger patients.

Many services have spent £90,000 of taxpayers' money on 'bariatric' ambulances to move the very heaviest.


The specialist vehicles are equipped with double-width trolley stretchers to accommodate patients weighing up to 50stone (318lb) and also tend to include inflatable lifting cushions.

The South Central ambulance trust has spent more than £1million in the last three years to upgrade nearly two thirds of its 180-strong fleet with special equipment.

But every ambulance service in the country has been spending thousands on specialist kit, according to freedom of information requests made by the BBC.

Special cushions cost about £2,500, stretchers are between £7,000 to £10,000 while reinforcing vehicle tail-lift costs about £800 per time.

Heavy duty wheelchairs cost at least £400 and hoists are £4,500 a time, it was reported.


An old ambulance compared with a specialist bariatric ambulances to carry obese patients

The West Midlands service has bought four specialist bariatric ambulances at a combined cost of more than £300,000.

Jo Webber, director of the Ambulance Service Network, said the emergency services had been left with no option.

She told the BBC: 'The fact is patients are getting larger and larger and ambulances need to be able to respond immediately to what could be life-threatening situations.

'Every service is having to invest money in this. It shows that some of the lifestyle changes we are seeing have a range of costs. It is not just about treating them, but the infrastructure costs as well.'

Every ambulance trust in England, as well as the services in Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland confirmed changes were being made although the pace of the approach varied, according to the data.

While the West Midlands, Yorkshire, the North West and Wales already have pools of bariatric ambulances, until recently in London ambulance bosses were paying a £5,000 monthly fee to a private service.

They have now bought two bariatric ambulances with a third on its way, while the rest of the fleet will also be equipped with specialist gear in the coming years.


Source:Dailymail

Mother with deadly cancer gene has both breasts removed as they 'were like ticking time bombs'

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By Daily Mail Reporter


'I could have got breast cancer next year, next week - at any moment'


A midwife has spoken of her agonising decision to have both her perfectly healthy breasts surgically removed to beat breast cancer.

Kara Smith, 40, from Kettering, is recovering after undergoing a gruelling eight-hour operation.

The mother of five said she felt she had no choice but to go through with the operation after doctors discovered a hereditary gene which meant she was almost certain to contract breast cancer in later life.

Kara underwent routine tests after her mother and aunt contracted breast cancer and was found to possess the hereditary BRCA2 gene, leaving her chances of avoiding cancer at just 15 per cent.

Kara said: 'I had just finished my night shift and arrived home. I got a call from the hospital saying my tests had come back positive and they needed to see me.

'I was absolutely devastated. I expected the tests to be clean. Suddenly my breasts were like ticking time bombs.

'I would have got it, I know I would have done. I could have got it next year, next week - at any moment.'

The only way to reduce the risk was a double mastectomy operation, but the decision to remove two perfectly healthy breasts proved to be a nightmare no woman would want to face.

Kara said: 'I tried to find every excuse not to have them off. I run and live a healthy lifestyle, but the doctors said that made no difference to the gene.

'I was devastated. But after two weeks I just thought "you can't make yourself miserable like this."

'I just decided, there and then, to have them both off. From that moment on I've just been really positive about it.

'I've started joking about it with friends and my five brilliant children have been having a laugh with me.

'The way I see it I've been really lucky. I didn't need to have any cancer treatment, and I know women my age who have died from breast cancer.

'It may seem strange but I feel brilliant, I fell like I'm on cloud nine.'


Kara Smith had her breasts removed and reconstructive surgery on the same day at Kettering Hospital

Doctors removed Kara's breasts at Kettering Hospital and performed reconstructive plastic surgery four weeks ago and she has been off work recovering ever since.

She said: 'It was really hard. I was taken down at half past nine and wasn't back until quarter to six.

'I have had drains put in for the blood and I have to have further reconstruction operations later.

'Ten years ago they didn't do reconstructions, now they do it on the day, so I feel so lucky. There's something there to replace what was taken away. They feel different, but at least I can now rest knowing the risk has gone. '


Source:Dailymail

One in eight women will get breast cancer as lifestyle blamed for huge rise in cases

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By Sophie Borland



Testing time: Almost 50,000 women are being diagnosed with breast cancer every year

One in eight women will develop breast cancer in their lifetime and the rate is rising, alarming figures show.

Scientists blame obesity, alcohol and the growing tendency to delay motherhood for record levels of the disease.

Up to 47,700 women are being diagnosed every year, equal to 130 a day. That is double the number 30 years ago.

Experts describe the figures as a ‘wake-up call’ and say thousands could avoid the disease if they drank less, maintained a healthy weight and took more exercise.

The rise has also been blamed on the fact that increasing numbers are delaying motherhood and consequently having fewer children. The figures show that there are now 124 cases per 100,000 women, twice as many as any other type of cancer.

Scientists believe some forms of breast cancer are triggered by the sex hormone oestrogen, which is linked to obesity, alcohol consumption, having fewer children and not breastfeeding.

They also blame hormone replacement therapy taken by millions every year to combat the symptoms of the menopause.

Figures from Cancer Research UK show that 47,700 women were diagnosed in 2008, compared to 42,400 in 1999 and just 24,120 in 1978.

Women are most at risk once they reach the menopause and 22,900 new cases – almost half – occur among those aged 50 to 69.

Doctors believe many tumours are caused by unhealthy lifestyles and are urging women to change their eating and drinking habits, particularly during the menopause.


Probable causes: Experts blame lifestyle choices such as alcohol and obesity, along with a growing wish to put off motherhood, for the spike in cancer rates

Research has found that obesity increases the risk of breast cancer after the menopause by up to 30 per cent. The overweight are also more likely to develop tumours.

Fat cells produce oestrogen and levels of this cancer-triggering hormone can be twice as high in obese women as those of a healthy weight.

Alcohol is also thought to raise the levels of oestrogen. Previous studies have shown that drinking even only one glass of wine a day can raise the risk of breast cancer by a fifth.


Women may also be increasing their risk by having fewer children, or none at all, because the levels of oestrogen decline during pregnancy. Those who delay motherhood and consequently have fewer babies will be exposed to oestrogen for a higher proportion of their lives.

The risk is elevated further because breast-feeding has been shown to protect against the tumours as it lowers the level of oestrogen and other hormones.

Dr Kat Arney, from Cancer Research UK, said: ‘There are several lifestyle factors such as alcohol, weight and activity which increase the risk.

‘It is also linked to a woman’s reproductive history. If a woman starts having children earlier in life she is less at risk. A woman who does not start having children until her thirties will only have one, maybe two.’

She added that the popularity of HRT was also a factor and urged women to take it for as limited a time as possible.

Dr Rachel Greig, of Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said: ‘These figures are a wake-up call and should not be ignored.

‘More women are developing breast cancer and, although survival is improving thanks to breakthroughs in breast awareness, screening and treatment, we clearly have much further to go.

‘A two-pronged attack is needed – commitment to research into the causes of breast cancer, supported by women arming themselves with knowledge of the risks that may contribute to the disease.

‘Some risk factors, such as getting older, cannot be changed but the good news is that others can. By drinking less, maintaining a healthy weight and getting physically active, women can reduce their risk of developing breast cancer.’

A major study in 2009 said that more than 40 per cent of breast cancers could be prevented if women made simple lifestyle changes.

The report by the World Cancer Research Fund advised women to take least 30 minutes of exercise a day and limit alcohol to one unit a day – a single small glass of wine.


Source:DailyMail

Smoking to get slim puts UK women at top of Europe's lung cancer table

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By Jenny Hope



The rate of lung cancer deaths among British women is the highest in Europe after many took up smoking to lose weight.

Researchers say it is three times higher than in Spain, the country with the lowest rate.

An estimated 15,632 women will die from lung cancer this year in the UK, up from 14,900 in 2007, according to a study published today. Lung cancer causes the most deaths from cancer in women in Britain.

Experts blame the epidemic on the fact women took up smoking in large numbers later in the 20th century than men – often in an attempt to control weight.

In addition, for genetic reasons women smokers are more at risk of developing lung cancer earlier than men and after smoking fewer cigarettes.

The study looks at cancer deaths in the European Union between 1970 and 2007 and predicts death rates for 2011.

Lung cancer death rates in British women have been the highest in the EU for a decade, reaching 20.57 per 100,000 in 2007.

The rate is predicted to level off this year at 20.33, which is three times higher than the estimated rate of 6.48 in Spain.

Lung cancer death rates in men in the UK are predicted to fall from 33.13 in 2007 to 28.29 this year, with deaths down from 19,700 to 18,245.


Lung cancer death rates in British women have been the highest in the EU for a decade, reaching 20.57 per 100,000 in 2007

Overall, cancer death rates across Europe are predicted to fall this year, with almost 1.3million dying from the disease, according to the researchers, from the University of Milan and the University of Lausanne.

The figures – published in the Annals of Oncology journal – show cancer death rates falling by 7 per cent in men and 6 per cent in women compared with 2007.

Women have been quitting smoking at a slower rate than men. But death rates are higher in men because the proportion of men who smoked used to be much larger than the proportion of women and the health effects of this are still being felt.


Source:Dailymail

Eating too much cheese could 'increase your risk of bladder cancer'

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By Daily Mail Reporter


Eating large portions of cheese on a regular basis could increase the risk of bladder cancer, according to new research.

Scientists found the risk increased by more than 50 per cent in those who ate more than 53g, or around 1.8oz a day - roughly the same weight as a small chocolate bar.

But eating less than that did not appear to increase the dangers.

A daily portion of olive oil, on the other hand, can more than halve the risk of getting the disease.

The results, published in the European Journal of Cancer, come from a study looking at how dietary fats influence a person's chances of getting bladder cancer.

Around 10,000 people a year in the UK fall victim to the disease and smokers are four times more likely to get it than non-smokers.

Other risk factors include exposure to harmful chemicals in the workplace and repeated bouts of bladder infections.

But studies have produced conflicting evidence on whether different types of fats prevent cancer or increase the chances of it occurring.

In the latest investigation, a team of Dutch and Belgian researchers set out to discover if saturated fats, such as those found in meat and dairy products, made cancer more likely while healthier fats, such as olive oil, offered some protection.

They studied the eating habits of 200 bladder cancer victims and compared them with 386 volunteers who had not developed tumours.

The results showed eating cheese had little effect unless the amount exceeded 53 grammes a day. After that the risk went up by more than half.

But researchers stressed the numbers of people in the study may be too small to conclude that cheese is a major health threat and called for further investigations to verify their findings.

Although milk also appeared to raise cancer risk, researchers said the results were not statistically significant.

Other foods, such as fish, chicken, eggs and margarine appeared to have little effect.

UK cheese consumption has risen by almost 13 per cent in the last decade.

In 1997, most people were eating around 103g a week. But by 2009, that had risen to 116g.

It's thought diets high in started fat may explain why Western populations have the highest rates of bladder cancer in the world.

The Mediterranean diet, rich in olive oil and plant foods, may slash the odds of developing the disease but high smoking rates in countries in that region mean similar numbers are affected as in northern Europe.

In a report on their findings, the researchers said: 'We found a potentially protective effect from a high intake of olive oil and a suggestive increased risk from high cheese consumption.

'But these results need to be confirmed by other studies.'


Source:Dailymail

Why late to bed, early to rise is a recipe for a heart attack

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By Daily Mail Reporter



It is the stuff of nightmares for those whose hectic work schedule or busy family life means getting up early and staying up late.

Sleeping for less than six hours a night greatly increases the risk of dying from a heart attack or stroke, a study has found.

Scientists claim that the modern tendency to delay going to bed in order to get through more of the items on the ‘to do’ list has serious health consequences.

But beware. Having the time and the tendency to retreat under the duvet for hours longer is not necessarily a health guarantee. Those who have too much sleep are also more likely to suffer a heart attack.

While the extra slumber is unlikely to be the cause, long-term illnesses such as heart disease often make sufferers feel tired, so sleeping for longer than nine hours a night may be an early warning sign.

Researchers found that those who slept for less than six hours were almost 50 per cent more likely to suffer a heart attack and 15 per cent more at risk of strokes.

They believe that not having enough sleep disrupts the balance of two key hormones, ghrelin and leptin, which control the appetite.

Poor sleepers tend to eat more and are more likely to be obese, so are at greater risk of high blood pressure and heart disease, which lead to heart attacks and strokes.

Experts recommend adults get at least six or seven hours’ shut-eye a night to stay healthy.

But as many as 60 per cent of us do not think we are sleeping enough, with a third suffering from insomnia. The researchers, from the University of Warwick, warned that trying to cram too much into one day by going to bed late and getting up early could lead to serious illnesses later in life.

They looked at the sleeping habits of almost 475,000 participants from 15 previous studies across eight countries, including the UK, the U.S., Japan, Sweden and Germany.


Proper rest: Sleeping for less than six hours a night greatly increases the risk of dying from a heart attack or stroke

Their findings, published in the European Heart Journal, show that those who slept for less than six hours were 48 per cent more likely to develop or die from heart disease and 15 per cent more likely to develop or die from a stroke.

Not having enough sleep decreases the levels of leptin in our blood, which means we do not feel as satisfied after eating.

At the same time, it raises the levels of ghrelin, responsible for triggering our appetite, thus making us feel hungrier.

The scientists believe that our ‘work hard, play hard’ society encourages us to sacrifice sleep and compromises our health.

Professor Francesco Cappuccio, from the University of Warwick Medical School, said: ‘If you sleep less than six hours per night and have disturbed sleep you stand a 48 per cent greater chance of developing or dying from heart disease and a 15 per cent greater chance of developing or dying of a stroke.

‘The trend for late nights and early mornings is actually a ticking time bomb for our health so you need to act now to reduce your risk of developing these life-threatening conditions.

'There is an expectation in today’s society to fit more into our lives. The whole work-life balance struggle is causing too many of us to trade in precious sleeping time to ensure we complete all the jobs we believe are expected of us.

‘But in doing so, we are significantly increasing the risk of suffering a stroke or developing cardiovascular disease resulting in, for example, heart attacks.’

Co-researcher Dr Michelle Miller said: ‘Chronic short sleep produces hormones and chemicals in the body which increase the risk of developing heart disease and strokes, and other conditions like high blood pressure and cholesterol, diabetes and obesity.’

But the scientists also warned that sleeping more than nine hours every night may be an early warning sign of heart disease.


Source:Dailymail