Think you can just make up for those late nights by catching extra shut-eye on Saturday morning?
Don't count on it, say researchers who report that sleeping in on weekends doesn't entirely restore the sleep you lost during the week.
For the study, researchers placed 30 volunteers on a sleep schedule that replicated a sleep-deprived work week followed by a weekend with extra "recovery" sleep. The participants' health and performance was tested at various times during this schedule.
The participants' levels of sleepiness increased significantly when they got too little sleep, but returned to normal levels after recovery sleep. Levels of inflammation in the body also increased significantly when the volunteers were sleep deprived, and returned to normal after recovery sleep, the findings showed.
In addition, levels of a stress-related hormone did not increase during sleep restriction, but were much lower after recovery sleep, the investigators pointed out in a news release from the American Physiological Society.
However, the participants' performance on a test that measured their ability to pay attention declined significantly when they got too little sleep and did not improve after recovery sleep.