Written by: Theresa Juva
Posted: Sunday, 04 May 2008
Page 1 of 2
For endurance athletes of all levels, sleep is a key to
recovery and performance. But how do you know when enough is enough? And what
can you do to get more?
Catching enough Zs is so important to triathlete Nathanael
Horne that he sometimes tells his fiancée to sleep on the couch if she comes
home late the night before a major race.
“I
try to get eight hours if I’m coming up to a big event,” says the 35-year-old.
“Everyone has different sleep requirements; I seem to require more.”
The grind of construction outside and long hours as an
allergy and immunology doctor sometimes prevent Horne from drifting into
dreamland. “In New York it’s incredibly difficult to get an adequate amount of
sleep,” he says. “New Yorkers professionally work harder than anyone else in
the world. If you are an athlete as well, you have even less time. One of the
first things to fall by the wayside is sleep.”
While a busy life creates a barrier between Horne and his
bed, slipping into the sheets is no problem for Ironman triathlete Iwan Axt.
His troubles begin when it’s time to doze off. “After a hard swim, I have
difficulty sleeping,“ he says. “It’s been bad enough that I’m thinking of getting
a new bed.”
The connection between endurance athletes and sleep is still
not fully understood, sleep experts say. Robert Basner, director of the
Cardiopulmonary Sleep and Ventilatory Disorders Center at Columbia University,
says few studies have produced conclusive results about the relationship
between endurance training and sleep. He explains that while it’s clear that
exercise causes fluctuations in people’s metabolic and cardiac systems that can
positively or negatively impact their rest, it is hard to point to one cause
for good or bad sleep.
“People have looked at sleep deprivation and injury and in
terms of performance training and injuries there are some studies that show no
effect and some that show effect,” he says. “Because there aren’t definite
studies we can’t say we know it’s bad for you.” He adds that it is also unclear
if too much training hinders an athlete’s ability to get shut eye, explaining
that, “if you are exhausted you tend to sleep better, but it’s not clear you’ll
maintain sleep. You can exhaust yourself to the point that you can’t sleep.”
While Axt believes his late-night swim the night before a
morning bike ride is probably contributing to his sleep difficulty, new runner
Lori-Ann Wynter is encountering the opposite.“Before a deep sleep was 20
minutes. Now a deep sleep is midnight to 6 a.m.,” says Wynter, who joined The
Running Center six months ago. “That’s a big step. Sleeping the way I do now is
really new to me.”
Wynter also says that a combination of changing her diet from
lots of carbohydrates at night to a lighter snack has also helped her fall
asleep faster and sleep for longer stretches.
David Schulman, director of the sleep disorders laboratory
at Emory University in Atlanta, says there are multiple reasons sleep can be
disrupted, including alcohol and caffeine consumption and eating and working
out too close to bedtime.
He advises athletes not to drink caffeine within 10 or 12
hours of their bedtimes and not to eat within 2 hours of their scheduled sleep
start. He also suggests leaving at least 5 hours to unwind after a workout
before hitting the hay.
If athletes are still having difficulty, he recommends
evaluating environmental obstacles that are preventing them from mentally
relaxing.“You have to make sure the bedroom is dark and quiet,” he says. “Make
sure you don’t have a TV or music on. There are only two things you should do
in bed: sleep and sex. You should not be reading in bed. The bedroom needs to
be sanctuary for sleeping.”
Sometimes barriers to sleep are within an athlete’s own
mind. “One problem could be a psycho-somatic stress related to an upcoming
event,” he says. “ If you’ve got something important in athletic life, you will
have insomnia related to it.”
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