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The shocking impact having only six hours sleep has on your body – and how to fix it today
- Sleep has an effect on everything, from your physical energy to stress levels
- It impacts your emotional wellbeing, health and anxiety levels as well as skin
- Those who sleep for six hours a night are four times more likely to get a cold
- Sleep expert Olivia Arezzolo shared the 10-step bedtime routine she follows
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If you are guilty of only getting only six hours sleep a night, you are four times more likely to get a cold, a leading sleep expert has revealed.
Olivia Arezzolo, from Sydney, said there is a huge connection between sleep and your health.
It affects everything from memory to cognitive function, stress levels, emotional wellbeing and even our skin and overall health.
Olivia Arezzolo (pictured), from Sydney, said there is a huge connection between sleep and your health; it affects everything from your cognitive function to stress levels and emotional wellbeing
Without seven or eight hours each night, you can expect physical, mental and emotional knock-on effects.
‘For our physical energy levels, sleep is vital,’ Olivia told The Beauty Chef.
‘Some 70 per cent of hGh (human growth hormone) is produced in deep sleep, which is not only responsible for skin health, but every single cell in the body.
‘This, with inadequate repair time, you are likely to wake feeling worn out and exhausted.’
Without seven or eight hours each night, you can expect physical, mental and emotional knock-on effects, Olivia (pictured) said
Olivia said that when we sleep, our brains ‘detoxify’ from a neurotoxin that can otherwise lead to brain fog, memory loss and even Alzheimer’s disease.
‘Emotionally, after one night of insufficient sleep, the stress hormone cortisol can increase up to 37 per cent, leaving us feeling wired, anxious and on edge,’ she said.
The long-term impact of not enough sleep is even worse, from a 45 per cent increase in risk of cardiovascular disease to type two diabetes and anxiety disorders.
‘Emotionally, after one night of insufficient sleep, the stress hormone cortisol can increase up to 37 per cent, leaving us feeling wired, anxious and on edge,’ Olivia (pictured) said
But it is easy to take charge of your sleep and work on making up for any sleep debt if you know how, Olivia said.
Previously, Olivia shared her 10-step bedtime routine that she follows every evening for the perfect night’s sleep.
She said she always practises deep belly breathing and meditation and takes a magnesium supplement every night, which is also known to promote sleepiness and relaxation.
Olivia likes to drink a cup of chamomile tea and banish any blue light before she settles down in bed.
‘Know that blue light, the spectrum of light suppressing melatonin and contributing to sleep difficulties, is emitted from your bathroom’s ceiling lights as well as the bedroom and your phone,’ Olivia told FEMAIL.
For this reason, even if you work hard to avoid devices and reduce blue light exposure, this will still be undone the minute you go into your bathroom to go to the toilet or take an evening shower.