Chances are, if you鈥檙e reading this, you got some sleep last night. But are you ?
Experts say it's an important question to consider.
Most of us spend , but you may need a night. The number of hours needed changes throughout your life, with babies and kids needing more sleep and people 65 and older able to function on slightly less than seven to nine hours.
Here鈥檚 what say about how much you really need 鈥 and whether your gender plays a role.
Sleep quality over quantity
Sleep is still a mystery, despite how critical it is for our health.
鈥淭he reasons aren鈥檛 entirely clear, but it鈥檚 an essential thing that we all do,鈥 said Dr. Rafael Pelayo, a sleep specialist at Stanford University. 鈥淪omething remarkable happens when you sleep. It鈥檚 the most natural form of self-care that we have.鈥
Most of the population gets between seven to nine hours 鈥 and that particular category has the lowest association with health problems, said Molly Atwood, a behavioral sleep medicine clinician at Johns Hopkins.
Once people either dip into less than six hours of sleep or get more than nine hours on average, the risk of health problems inches up, Atwood said, but everybody is different.
When you鈥檙e trying to figure out how much sleep you need, it鈥檚 important to think about the quality of it, Pelayo said: 鈥淲hat you really want to do is wake up feeling refreshed 鈥 that鈥檚 what it鈥檚 about.鈥
鈥淚f somebody tells me that they sleep many hours but they wake up tired, something is wrong," Pelayo said. "You shouldn鈥檛 leave your favorite restaurant feeling hungry.鈥
How much sleep we need changes
The amount of sleep we need changes throughout our lives. Newborns need the most 鈥 somewhere between 14 to 17 hours.
鈥淒efinitely when we鈥檙e babies and children, because we are growing so rapidly, we do need a lot more sleep,鈥 Atwood said.
The National Sleep Foundation recommends most adults between 26 and 64 get between seven to nine hours of sleep. People who are 65 and older can get slightly less, and young adults between ages 16 and 25 can get slightly more.
Humans cycle through sleep stages roughly every 90 minutes. In the first portion of the night, Atwood said that more of the cycle is slow wave sleep, or deep sleep, which is essential to repairing and restoring the body. It鈥檚 also when 鈥済rowth hormone鈥 is released.
In the latter hours of the night, more of the sleep cycle is spent in rapid-eye movement sleep, or dream sleep, which is important for learning and memory consolidation, or the process in which short-term memory gets turned into long-term memory.
Kids get more 鈥渄eep sleep,鈥 with about 50% of the night in that realm, she said. That drops at adolescence, Atwood said, because our body doesn鈥檛 need the same kind of repair and restoration.
Something else interesting happens around puberty: Gender-based differences in sleep start to crop up.
Do women need more sleep than men?
Research doesn鈥檛 show that women need more sleep 鈥 but women do get slightly more sleep on average than men, Atwood said.
It starts at a young age. Though they have the same sleep needs, teenage girls seem to get less sleep than teenage boys, Pelayo said. Additionally, teenage girls tend to complain of insomnia more frequently.
When women become first-time mothers, they often care for newborns throughout the night more frequently, which means less sleep, said Allison Harvey, a clinical psychologist and professor who studies sleep at UC Berkeley.
Hormones may also impact women's sleep quantity and quality during pregnancy and menopause.
鈥淲ith menopause in particular, women can develop deterioration in their sleep with an increased number and duration of nighttime awakenings,鈥 said Dr. Mithri Junna, a Mayo Clinic neurologist who specializes in sleep.
Atwood said women may also need more sleep right before their menstrual cycle.
鈥淭here are definitely times that your body鈥檚 telling you that you need more sleep,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to listen.鈥
When to seek help sleeping
You'll know if you鈥檙e not getting enough sleep if you're feeling grumpy, irritable and inattentive. Long-term, those minor symptoms can become serious problems 鈥 even deadly.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e not getting enough sleep or you have untreated insomnia or sleep apnea, your risk of depression increases,鈥 Atwood said. 鈥淵our risk of cardiovascular issues like high blood pressure, risk of heart attack and stroke increases. Your immune system is compromised. You鈥檙e at greater risk for Alzheimer鈥檚.鈥
If you鈥檙e getting the recommended amount of sleep every night but still waking up feeling tired, you might consider going to your primary care physician. They can rule out other health conditions that may affect your sleep, Atwood said. But if problems persist, seeking out a sleep specialist could be helpful.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute鈥檚 Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Devna Bose, The Associated Press