Showing posts with label Sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sleep. Show all posts

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Can relaxation drinks put you to sleep?

Once, "relaxation beverages" consisted of alcohol, chamomile tea and warm milk. Now, the field includes a slew of new drinks promising a better night's sleep using such ingredients as melatonin, valerian root and - think turkey - tryptophan.

They have apt names such as Unwind, iChill and Dream Water, and offer such flavors as Berry-Berry Tired, Snoozeberry and Lullaby Lemon. They're the inverse of energy drinks. Consumers can wake up with Red Bull and then wind down with Slow Cow.

But can consumers trust these fruity concoctions to give them their z's?

According to Steven M. Scharf, director of the Sleep Disorders Center at the University of Maryland in Baltimore, the answer is a resounding maybe.

"The issue is this: Some of them probably have some biologic effect, but they haven't been as well studied as you'd like," Scharf says. "Nobody's ever compared valerian root to [the prescription sleep aid] Ambien."

The chief ingredient in many of these beverages is melatonin, a hormone that induces sleepiness and helps coordinate the body's biological clock. It's typically released by the pineal gland around 10 p.m.; secretion stops around 4 or 5 a.m., helping to trigger the body to wake up, Scharf says.

The body produces about three-fourths of a milligram of melatonin a day. The manufacturer of the sleep aid Snooz'n says its 2.5-ounce "shots" contain five milligrams of melatonin; Unwind, a "relaxation blend," has three milligrams per 12-ounce can.

Oral doses of melatonin haven't worked much better at inducing sleep than a placebo in most studies, Scharf says, and a single, concentrated shot of the stuff doesn't exactly mimic the body's time-release system. However, a study published in January in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society found that a pre-bedtime cocktail of magnesium, zinc and a five-milligram dose of melatonin significantly improved sleep among a group of 43 elderly Italian insomniacs.

Jason Healy, the head of InterMark Brands, which markets Snooz'n, says he drinks his product on nights when he is stressed-out or when he is traveling internationally. The back of the Snooz'n bottle says the beverage will "combat stress, energy drinks and sleeplessness" and takes about 30 minutes to take effect. When it launches nationally in March, Snooz'n will be available in grocery and convenience stores and pharmacies, like most of these drinks.

"We attack [insomnia] from two angles," Healy says. "You've got to turn off all the stimulants and also get into a natural sleep cycle."

Melatonin is used for the latter, while ingredients such as valerian root and chamomile take care of the former, Healy says. Both of those herbs are associated with soporific effects, according to the Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database. Valerian root has properties that resemble the benzodiazepine class of medications (such as Valium and Xanax), but Scharf says he has no idea how they compare with standard sleeping pills because of the lack of comparative studies.

Finding a niche

Containers of relaxation drinks look similar to those of energy drinks. Many mimic the diminutive shape of the 5-Hour Energy shot or the bright graphics and tall, narrow can of Rockstar or Monster. Flavors range from a pleasant, fruit-flavored soda to just shy of cough syrup.

Many relaxation beverages contain safety labels that warn consumers that they should neither drive or operate machinery after drinking them, nor mix them with alcohol. Some say they aren't intended for people younger than 18 or for pregnant or nursing women - a warning that the Food and Drug Administration has also made about melatonin.

In January 2010, the FDA sent a warning letter to the Innovative Beverage Group, which makes the relaxation beverage Drank, saying the melatonin it uses is an "unapproved food additive" and not "generally recognized as safe."

Drank is still being sold with melatonin in it. In a statement, Drank inventor Peter Bianchi says "the safety of Drank's consumers remains a top priority" and the company is working to modify the product's packaging and marketing "to reflect its classification as a dietary supplement."

The FDA regulates conventional beverages' ingredients and labeling claims more strictly than those of dietary supplements. Drank is still classified as a beverage.

The relaxation drink market is tiny compared with the energy drink market, says Garima Goel Lal, a senior analyst at the consumer research firm Mintel.

A Mintel survey found that 48 percent of all "functional beverage" users said they were looking for beverages to release stress.

A functional beverage - the term is used for sport, energy and relaxation drinks - is a nonalcoholic drink that claims to have health benefits. The number of nonalcoholic beverages making relaxation claims continues to rise; 40 new ones came on the market in 2010, according to Mintel. The field is too young to identify the leaders and the losers, Goel Lal says.

"They're trying to find a niche," she says.

Multiple choices

Katherine Zeratsky, a registered dietitian at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has blogged about relaxation drinks. She says that people with certain health conditions, such as high blood pressure, should consult their physician before downing a can of Unwind or any of the other sleep beverages.

"A person can just go to the convenience store and purchase this," Zeratsky says. "There's this perception that it's safe and, depending on the person, it might not be a good choice."


View the original article here

Friday, June 14, 2013

Apps and gadgets to track your sleep

A bunch of gadgets and apps are now on the market to help high-tech insomniacs (or just the sleep-curious) track their z's. These aren't meant to help you fall asleep, though there are plenty of other apps intended to do that. We're talking here about gizmos that claim to record your movements all night and then chart your sleep phases in the morning. Some even have alarm clocks that wake you up in a "light" phase of sleep so that you feel refreshed instead of groggy.

Steven M. Scharf, director of the University of Maryland's Sleep Disorders Center in Baltimore, says that the products are based on motion-sensitive devices called accelerometers - less-sophisticated versions of the technology he uses to track patients' sleep. (He also analyzes brain waves and breathing.)

"Perhaps these are useful for estimating sleep time, but their usefulness in estimating sleep stages is probably limited," Scharf says. Here are three:

Sleeptracker Elite

($179, www.sleeptracker.com)

The Sleeptracker watch is a "sleep phase monitor and vibrating alarm [that] gently wakes you at the most optimal time." You enter an alarm time, plus how much earlier than that time you'd be willing to wake up, from not at all to 90 minutes. The watch will vibrate and/or beep sometime during that time window when your sleep cycle is in an "optimal, almost-awake moment."

Once you're up, you can plug the Sleeptracker into a computer to download a graph of your "almost-awake moments." (Scharf says about 30 such episodes a night is normal.) The software shows the average time between these episodes. You can check off factors that may have affected sleep, such as alcohol, noise and late-night snacking, to determine which factors might be interrupting your sleep. Associating stillness with "deep" sleep and wiggling with "light" sleep is an oversimplification at best and not accurate at worst, Scharf says. For example, slow wave or "delta" sleep is a deep, restorative stage and we can and do make movements during it.

Sleep Cycle

(99 cents, www.mdlabs.se/sleepcycle)

This app is much less expensive than the other gadgets, but it's compatible only with the iPhone or iPod Touch. Sleep Cycle uses those devices' built-in accelerometers - it's the technology that allows people to use their iPhones as steering wheels or light sabers in games - to track motion during the night. The user is instructed to leave the iPhone or iPod on the corner of the mattress, near the pillow. (People who feel uncomfortable having the iPhone emitting its small dose of radiation next to their heads all night may set the phone to flight mode.)

Like the Sleeptracker, Sleep Cycle claims to wake people at an optimal phase of sleep within a preselected wake-up window. The "intelligent snooze" feature lets the sleeper snooze for shorter and shorter periods until the alarm time.

Fitbit Wireless Personal Trainer

($99, www.fitbit.com)

Fitbit is a "24/7 health and wellness monitor," according to a company spokeswoman, so it tracks sleep as well as activity throughout the day. For sleep tracking, you can wear the Fitbit on your wrist at night. In addition to an accelerometer, the Fitbit uses a 3-D motion sensor, similar to the one in a Nintendo Wii, to capture movement. The creators say the device can tell how long it took you to fall asleep and how many times you woke up. Based on that data, which is wirelessly uploaded online, it assigns a "sleep efficiency score."

Do you use any apps or gadgets to track your sleep? If so, please share your experience.


View the original article here

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Sleep Cycle alarm clock - Maciek Drejak Labs

Waking up made easy.

An intelligent alarm clock that analyzes your sleep and wakes you in the lightest sleep phase – the natural way to wake up feeling rested and relaxed. 

We now help more than a million people wake up rested!

Featured in: CNN, Wired, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, BBC, The New York Times and many more.

#1 Top Paid app in Japan 
#1 Top Paid app in Germany 
#1 Top Paid app in France 
#1 Top Paid app in Russia 
#1 Top Paid app in Netherlands 
#1 Top Paid app in Taiwan 
#1 Top Paid app in South Korea 
#1 Top Paid app in Sweden 
#1 Top Paid app in Norway 
...and many more. 

"It just works. Period. It does exactly what it advertises which is absolutely amazing." 
-- 5/5 stars on 148apps.com

Sleep cycle is continuously rated as the best intelligent alarm clock, Sleep Cycle is now the worlds most used intelligent alarm clock.

------------------------------------------------------- 

* Sleep Cycle monitors your movement during sleep using the extremely sensitive accelerometer in your iPhone. 

* Sleep Cycle then finds the optimal time to wake you up during a 30 minute window that ends at your set alarm time. 

* Look at the screenshots for recommended iPhone placement. 

------------------------------------------------------- 

As you sleep you go through different phases, ranging from deep sleep to light sleep. The phase you are in when your alarm goes off is critical for how tired you will feel when you wake up. 

Since you move differently in bed during the different phases, Sleep Cycle can use the accelerometer in your iPhone to monitor your movement and determine which sleep phase you are in. 

Sleep Cycle wakes you when you are in your lightest sleep phase. 

Sleep Cycle was developed using proven sleep science and years of research and development. 

------------------------------------------------------- 

MAIN FEATURES

– Waking up made easy! Sleep Cycle analyzes your sleep and wakes you in your lightest sleep phase.

– Detailed sleep statistics and sleep graphs for every night.

– 15 carefully selected, high quality, alarm melodies.

– Use iPod music as wake up sound

– Snooze by shaking or tapping the phone lightly.

– Customizable wake up window. From instant (regular alarm clock) up to 90 minutes.

– Background mode - set your alarm and exit Sleep Cycle - sleep analysis will continue in the background

– Sleep notes: see how events such as drinking coffee, eating too much or having a stressful day affect your sleep quality

– Long term graphs: track sleep quality over time, see which days of the week you sleep best and much more

– Export sleep data to Excel for detailed analysis

------------------------------------------------------- 

REQUIREMENTS 
Ability to charge your phone by the bed
Ability to place your iPhone according to the instructions (see screenshots)

* Fixed an issue with daylight saving time
* Fixed a "keychain" crash which affected Runkeeper users


View the original article here

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Sleep Cycle alarm clock - Maciek Drejak Labs

Waking up made easy.

An intelligent alarm clock that analyzes your sleep and wakes you in the lightest sleep phase – the natural way to wake up feeling rested and relaxed. 

We now help more than a million people wake up rested!

Featured in: CNN, Wired, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, BBC, The New York Times and many more.

#1 Top Paid app in Japan 
#1 Top Paid app in Germany 
#1 Top Paid app in France 
#1 Top Paid app in Russia 
#1 Top Paid app in Netherlands 
#1 Top Paid app in Taiwan 
#1 Top Paid app in South Korea 
#1 Top Paid app in Sweden 
#1 Top Paid app in Norway 
...and many more. 

"It just works. Period. It does exactly what it advertises which is absolutely amazing." 
-- 5/5 stars on 148apps.com

Sleep cycle is continuously rated as the best intelligent alarm clock, Sleep Cycle is now the worlds most used intelligent alarm clock.

------------------------------------------------------- 

* Sleep Cycle monitors your movement during sleep using the extremely sensitive accelerometer in your iPhone. 

* Sleep Cycle then finds the optimal time to wake you up during a 30 minute window that ends at your set alarm time. 

* Look at the screenshots for recommended iPhone placement. 

------------------------------------------------------- 

As you sleep you go through different phases, ranging from deep sleep to light sleep. The phase you are in when your alarm goes off is critical for how tired you will feel when you wake up. 

Since you move differently in bed during the different phases, Sleep Cycle can use the accelerometer in your iPhone to monitor your movement and determine which sleep phase you are in. 

Sleep Cycle wakes you when you are in your lightest sleep phase. 

Sleep Cycle was developed using proven sleep science and years of research and development. 

------------------------------------------------------- 

MAIN FEATURES

– Waking up made easy! Sleep Cycle analyzes your sleep and wakes you in your lightest sleep phase.

– Detailed sleep statistics and sleep graphs for every night.

– 15 carefully selected, high quality, alarm melodies.

– Use iPod music as wake up sound

– Snooze by shaking or tapping the phone lightly.

– Customizable wake up window. From instant (regular alarm clock) up to 90 minutes.

– Background mode - set your alarm and exit Sleep Cycle - sleep analysis will continue in the background

– Sleep notes: see how events such as drinking coffee, eating too much or having a stressful day affect your sleep quality

– Long term graphs: track sleep quality over time, see which days of the week you sleep best and much more

– Export sleep data to Excel for detailed analysis

------------------------------------------------------- 

REQUIREMENTS 
Ability to charge your phone by the bed
Ability to place your iPhone according to the instructions (see screenshots)

* Fixed an issue with daylight saving time
* Fixed a "keychain" crash which affected Runkeeper users


View the original article here

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Podcast: A Better Sleep Drug, Spotting Cancer Cells, and the Impact of Flushed Pharmaceuticals

Have scientists developed a sleep drug without the side effects? How might a new device spot cancer cells before they metastasize? And what really happens to the drugs we flush down the toilet?

Science 's Online News Editor David Grimm chats about these stories and more with Science's Sarah Crespi.

Listen to the full Science podcast.

Read the transcript.

Hear more podcasts.


View the original article here