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Everyone agrees sleep matters—and yet it’s the first thing we sacrifice. In this episode, we unpack why chronic sleep deprivation is one of the fastest ways to sabotage your brain, metabolism, and long-term health.
We break down the data linking short sleep to higher mortality and dementia risk, explain the glymphatic system (your brain’s overnight cleaning crew), and discuss why common “solutions” like Benadryl, benzodiazepines, melatonin, and alcohol often make sleep worse—not better.
This isn’t about perfect sleep scores or expensive gadgets. It’s about understanding what’s actually at stake—and getting the fundamentals right so you can protect your brain and healthspan for decades to come.
What we cover:
Why sleep is universally acknowledged—and universally neglected
The striking link between short sleep, dementia, and all-cause mortality
The glymphatic system: how your brain clears toxic waste during sleep
Why deep slow-wave sleep is when the real “cleaning” happens
Why OTC sleep aids like Benadryl aren’t harmless
Benzodiazepines and why they alter sleep architecture
New data raising concerns about long-term melatonin use
Alcohol and sleep: an honest, nuanced discussion
Sleep hygiene strategies that actually work
Why sleep regularity may matter as much as total hours
Sleep is active maintenance, not downtime. Your brain clears beta-amyloid and tau primarily during deep sleep. Skip sleep, and waste accumulates.
Midlife sleep shapes late-life brain health. Dementia risk isn’t about your 70s—it’s about decades of habits starting in your 40s and 50s.
Consistency matters. Going to bed and waking within a consistent window may be more protective than exact sleep duration.
OTC sleep aids aren’t benign. Long-term use of anticholinergic medications like diphenhydramine is linked to increased dementia risk.
Sedation ≠ restorative sleep. Being unconscious doesn’t mean your brain is doing the work it needs to do.
Alcohol fragments sleep. It may help you fall asleep but disrupts REM and the second half of the night.
The basics work. Light, timing, temperature, caffeine awareness, and routine beat any supplement or gadget.
Instagram: @mdlongevitylab
www.mdlongevitylab.com
By MD Longevity LabEveryone agrees sleep matters—and yet it’s the first thing we sacrifice. In this episode, we unpack why chronic sleep deprivation is one of the fastest ways to sabotage your brain, metabolism, and long-term health.
We break down the data linking short sleep to higher mortality and dementia risk, explain the glymphatic system (your brain’s overnight cleaning crew), and discuss why common “solutions” like Benadryl, benzodiazepines, melatonin, and alcohol often make sleep worse—not better.
This isn’t about perfect sleep scores or expensive gadgets. It’s about understanding what’s actually at stake—and getting the fundamentals right so you can protect your brain and healthspan for decades to come.
What we cover:
Why sleep is universally acknowledged—and universally neglected
The striking link between short sleep, dementia, and all-cause mortality
The glymphatic system: how your brain clears toxic waste during sleep
Why deep slow-wave sleep is when the real “cleaning” happens
Why OTC sleep aids like Benadryl aren’t harmless
Benzodiazepines and why they alter sleep architecture
New data raising concerns about long-term melatonin use
Alcohol and sleep: an honest, nuanced discussion
Sleep hygiene strategies that actually work
Why sleep regularity may matter as much as total hours
Sleep is active maintenance, not downtime. Your brain clears beta-amyloid and tau primarily during deep sleep. Skip sleep, and waste accumulates.
Midlife sleep shapes late-life brain health. Dementia risk isn’t about your 70s—it’s about decades of habits starting in your 40s and 50s.
Consistency matters. Going to bed and waking within a consistent window may be more protective than exact sleep duration.
OTC sleep aids aren’t benign. Long-term use of anticholinergic medications like diphenhydramine is linked to increased dementia risk.
Sedation ≠ restorative sleep. Being unconscious doesn’t mean your brain is doing the work it needs to do.
Alcohol fragments sleep. It may help you fall asleep but disrupts REM and the second half of the night.
The basics work. Light, timing, temperature, caffeine awareness, and routine beat any supplement or gadget.
Instagram: @mdlongevitylab
www.mdlongevitylab.com