Sleep problems can increase someone’s risk of stroke . Sleep problems can include too little sleep (less than five hours), too much sleep (more than nine hours), poor quality, difficulty getting to sleep or staying asleep, prolonged napping, and snoring and breathing cessation. In this Mayo Clinic Minute, Dr.
Stephen English , a Mayo Clinic vascular neurologist, explains why poor sleep can be linked to stroke. Sleep is something people spend about a third of their lives doing and for good reason. “It’s so restorative for brain health,” explains English.
“Adequate sleep helps to ensure that our blood vessels and our brain cells are healthy and viable for years to come.” But tossing and turning at night can have consequences, including increasing someone’s risk of stroke. “When people have sleep-related disorders, such as sleep apnea, they’re getting less sleep or poor-quality sleep.
And that leads to reduced oxygen and blood flow to the brain. And that can reduce or make changes over time to the brain that leads to increased risk of stroke or cognitive impairment from vascular disorders to the brain,” says Dr. English.
He says it’s important to recognize that sleep hygiene, along with diet and exercise, is a modifiable risk, and it’s never too late to make changes to reduce your risk . “The better we are at taking care of the foundational things for our health go a long way to making sure our blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol — those are th.