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How sleep can improve your immunity

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    Often when we're sick
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    typically what we want to do
    is just curl up in bed
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    and go to sleep.
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    And in part what we're trying to do
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    is sleep ourselves well
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    because there's a very
    intimate association
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    between our sleep health
    and our immune health.
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    [Sleeping with Science]
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    We know that individuals reporting
    less than seven hours of sleep a night
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    are almost three times more likely
    to become infected by the rhinovirus,
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    otherwise known as the common cold.
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    We also know that women
    sleeping five hours or less a night,
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    are almost 70 percent more likely
    to develop pneumonia.
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    Well we've also discovered
    that sleep can play a role
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    in your successful immunization.
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    So in one study,
    they took a group of individuals
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    and they limited them
    to four hours of sleep a night
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    for six nights.
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    And in the other group,
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    they gave them a full night of sleep
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    each and every one of those nights.
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    And then during that time period,
    they gave them a flu shot
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    and they measured
    the response to that flu shot.
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    What they discovered
    is that in those individuals
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    who were sleeping just four hours a night,
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    they went on to produce
    less than 50 percent
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    of the normal antibody response.
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    So in other words,
    if you're not getting sufficient sleep
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    in the week or the days
    before you get your flu shot,
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    it may render that vaccination
    far less effective as a consequence.
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    What this tells us,
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    and now what we're starting to learn,
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    is that it's during sleep at night,
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    including deep non-REM sleep,
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    when we actually restock the weaponry
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    within our immune arsenal.
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    We actually stimulate the production
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    of numerous different immune factors.
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    And furthermore,
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    the body actually increases
    its sensitivity to those immune factors.
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    So you wake up the next day
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    as a more robust immune individual.
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    So when it comes to your immune system,
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    you should perhaps think of sleep
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    as one of the best
    health insurance policies
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    that you could ever wish for.
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    (soft music)
Title:
How sleep can improve your immunity
Speaker:
Matt Walker
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED Series
Duration:
02:17

English subtitles

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