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Keyword: sleepdeprivation

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  • Study shows sleep deprivation impairs stem cells in the cornea

    Sleep deprivation, which means getting too little high-quality sleep, is a serious health problem. Sleep deprivation has negative impacts on mental and physical health. Eye problems such as dryness and itching are commonly experienced after episodes of sleep deprivation, while long-term sleep deprivation comes with an increased risk for eye disease. The cornea, which is the transparent tissue layer covering the eye, is essential for assuring health and function of the eye. The cornea is maintained by stem cells, which divide to replace dying cells and to repair small injuries. Corneal stem cell activity needs to be precisely tuned to...
  • Ghislaine Maxwell is woken up every 15 minutes in jail to prevent suicide: lawyers

    11/25/2020 12:57:19 AM PST · by knighthawk · 50 replies
    NY Post ^ | November 24 2020 | Rebecca Rosenberg
    Accused child abuser Ghislaine Maxwell is roused by a flashlight every 15 minutes in her cell to make sure she hasn’t killed herself like Jeffrey Epstein — and subjected to more onerous conditions than the Bureau of Prison’s most dangerous inmates, her lawyers wrote Tuesday in a letter. “She is overmanaged under conditions more restrictive than inmates housed in 10South, the most restrictive unit in the MCC; or individuals convicted of terrorism and capital murder and incarcerated at FCI Florence ADMAX, the most restrictive facility operated by the BOP,” the filing states. The letter is in response to a Monday...
  • Medical Professionals and Malpractice: The Dangers of Sleep Deprivation

    07/14/2019 1:47:25 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 50 replies
    American Thinker.com ^ | July 14, 2019 | John Glynn
    In the words of the acclaimed writer JoJo Jensen, “Without enough sleep, we all become tall two-year-olds.” Many scientists have pondered the question of why sleep is of such vital importance. From an evolutionary perspective, it would be ideal if we could survive without sleep. After all, shut-eye leaves animals, including humans, vulnerable to predation. If you travel quite frequently, you’ve probably succumbed to “first night effect,” or FNE. In simple terms, this means that many humans tend to have a difficult time sleeping during the first night in a new place. According to numerous evolutionary theorists, this reveals something...
  • VIDEO: Frog Apocalypse In My Patio!!!

    05/03/2019 6:22:52 AM PDT · by PJ-Comix · 57 replies
    YouTube ^ | April 3, 2019 | DUmmie FUnnies
    VIDEO On May 2, 2019 I discovered hundreds of baby frogs had invaded my patio. As mysteriously as they arrived, hours later they all split. If you have any ideas on why so many frogs arrived in my patio and then later just as mysteriously all left, please let me know in the comments below.
  • Judge asks Seagrams heiress if Michael Avenatti is secretly her attorney. She faints in court.

    03/29/2019 11:52:41 AM PDT · by UMCRevMom@aol.com · 59 replies
    BPR ^ | March 28, 2019 | Victor Rantala
    Billionaire heiress Clare Bronfman fainted in court after being asked by the judge if she had secretly hired Michael Avenatti as her attorney. She was taken out of a federal courtroom on a stretcher and the hearing was rescheduled for today. The Seagrams heiress is on trial for offenses related to her involvement in the SEX-SLAVE CULT DOS. She is reportedly a leader of the controversial NXIVM sex cult. Bronfman was joined in court by lawyer Mark Geragos who sources say is the co-conspirator in Avenatti’s Nike extortion case. Although Avenatti has not submitted paperwork attesting to being an attorney...
  • A Terrorist Released

    11/06/2011 5:32:48 AM PST · by Servant of the Cross · 18 replies
    National Review ^ | 11/5/2011 | Andrew C. McCarthy
    Binyam Mohamed is back in the news. You may remember him as the al-Qaeda operative who was slated to help would-be “dirty bomber” Jose Padilla conduct a second wave of post-9/11 attacks, targeting American cities. You also may not remember him. After all, the Obama administration quietly released him without charges. Well, there’s a new chapter in this sordid tale. Mohamed is living large — taxpayer-funded large — in Great Britain. For that, we can thank the Lawyer Left’s stubborn insistence that enemy war criminals are really run-of-the-mill defendants. Actually, make that run-of-the-mill plaintiffs. Unlike Padilla, who actually got into...
  • Chinese Man Dies From Sleep Deprivation After Staying Up Late to Watch the World Cup

    06/17/2014 5:52:18 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 32 replies
    UPI ^ | June 16, 2014 | Evan Bleier
    The 25-year-old man was found dead with the TV on after the Netherlands beat Spain 5-1 on Friday.According to reports, a Chinese World Cup fan who stayed up late to watch the coverage of the event has died from sleep deprivation. The 25-year-old football fan was found slumped in front of his television at his home in Suzhou sometime after the Netherlands beat Spain 5-1 on Friday. Due to an 11-hour time difference, World Cup games from Brazil are broadcast in China in the middle of the night. The man was taken to People's Hospital of Xiangcheng and pronounced dead....
  • 6 Ways a Poor Night's Sleep Messes with You

    12/07/2013 5:42:41 PM PST · by Kenny · 20 replies
    Real Clear Science ^ | December 6, 2013 | Ross Pomeroy
    We all know how we feel when sleep-deprived: tired, groggy, and grumpy. But have you ever considered all of the ways just a single poor night of sleep may be messing with you? Science has revealed a great many ramifications that you've probably never thought of. 1. You're more depressed and anxious. In 2008, researchers assessed 226 individuals who had six or more hours of sleep the previous night and 112 individuals who had less. The "poor sleep" group scored significantly higher in levels of stress, depression, and anxiety compared to those that slept longer.2. You pee more the next...
  • JetBlue captain goes berserk on NYC-to-Vegas flight (Videos in the link)

    03/27/2012 12:17:24 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 96 replies
    New York Post ^ | March 27, 2012 | BILL SANDERSON and PEDRO OLIVEIRA Jr.
    A JetBlue captain went berserk on a flight from Kennedy Airport to Las Vegas today in an incident that forced the plane to make an emergency landing, passengers and authorities said. “Say your prayers!” the crazed pilot screamed as he ran up and down the aisle, a passenger told The Post.
  • Midnight Senate session to clear decks for health care debate

    12/17/2009 8:00:13 PM PST · by malkee · 58 replies · 2,263+ views
    Las Vegas Sun ^ | 12/17/09 | Lisa Mascaro
    WASHINGTON — Don’t touch that C-SPAN dial. The Senate is planning a midnight session tonight as Democrats and Republicans fight fire with fire over health care reform. Tonight’s session is not even about health care but rather the annual Department of Defense spending bill. Senators have a 1 a.m. vote on the Pentagon bill. But with just one week to go before the Christmas deadline on health care, neither side is making this easy. Democrats have little room to spare as the health bill must go through a series of potentially time-consuming procedural votes in coming days if Senate Majority...
  • Why Sleepyheads Forget

    10/22/2009 10:49:40 PM PDT · by neverdem · 11 replies · 1,118+ views
    ScienceNOW Daily News ^ | 21 October 2009 | Michael Torrice
    Red-eye flights, all-night study sessions, and extra-inning playoff games all deprive us of sleep and can leave us forgetful the next day. Now scientists have discovered that lost sleep disrupts a specific molecule in the brain's memory circuitry, possibly leading to treatments for tired brains. Neuroscientists studying rodents and humans have found that sleep deprivation interrupts the storage of episodic memories: information about who, what, when, and where. To lay down these memories, neurons in our brains form new connections with other neurons or strengthen old ones. This rewiring process, which occurs over a period of hours, requires a rat's...
  • CIA Terror Suspects 'Kept Awake For 11 Days'

    05/10/2009 3:23:17 PM PDT · by lewisglad · 71 replies · 3,160+ views
    The Times of London ^ | 5/10/09 | Anne Barrowclough
    More than 25 of the CIA's war-on-terror prisoners were subjected to sleep deprivation for as long as 11 days at a time during the administration of former president George Bush. At one stage during the war on terror, the Central Intelligence Agency was allowed to keep prisoners awake for as long as 11 days, citing memoranda made public by the Justice department last month. The limit was later reduced to just over a week, the report stated. Sleep deprivation was one of the most important elements in the CIA's interrogation programme, seen as more effective than more violent techniques used...
  • Memos shed light on CIA use of sleep deprivation

    05/10/2009 2:38:27 AM PDT · by CutePuppy · 13 replies · 938+ views
    LATimes ^ | May 10, 2009 | Greg Miller
    As President Obama prepared last month to release secret memos on the CIA's use of severe interrogation methods, the White House fielded a flurry of last-minute appeals. One came from former CIA Director Michael V. Hayden, who expressed disbelief that the administration was prepared to expose methods it might later decide it needed. "Are you telling me that under all conditions of threat, you will never interfere with the sleep cycle of a detainee?" Hayden asked a top White House official, according to sources familiar with the exchange. From the beginning, sleep deprivation had been one of the most important...
  • The Opposite of Intelligence

    04/28/2009 4:59:42 PM PDT · by neverdem · 4 replies · 443+ views
    realclearpolitics.com ^ | April 28, 2009 | Debra Saunders
    The mantra from the left during the Bush years went something like this: The world is not black and white. Sophisticated minds should seek out different, nuanced opinions. Now that Barack Obama is president, you can say a farewell to nuance. The left chants, "torture doesn't work" -- defining waterboarding and sleep deprivation as torture. Obama has a longhand version of that mantra in his rejection of the "false choice between our security and our ideals." In Obamaland, somehow there never are difficult choices. From the presidency that was supposed to promote intellectualism comes the argument that waterboarding is immoral...
  • Study provides first evidence of neural link between sleep loss and psychiatric disorders

    10/22/2007 10:35:47 AM PDT · by crazyshrink · 50 replies · 86+ views
    National Institutes of Health, American Academy of Sleep Medicine ^ | 10/22/07 | University of California - Berkeley
    Berkeley -- It has long been assumed that sleep deprivation can play havoc with our emotions. This is notably apparent in soldiers in combat zones, medical residents and even new parents. Now there's a neurological basis for this theory, according to new research from the University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard Medical School. In the first neural investigation into what happens to the emotional brain without sleep, results from a brain imaging study suggest that while a good night's rest can regulate your mood and help you cope with the next day's emotional challenges, sleep deprivation does the opposite by...
  • What's the longest you've gone without sleep?

    11/28/2006 12:47:33 PM PST · by pieceofthepuzzle · 71 replies · 2,805+ views
    This is a curiosity-based vanity. My impression is that the average FReeper works very hard. Probably the most common reason people deprive themselves of sleep is to get work done. I've heard some amazing stories of how little sleep soldiers have gotten in the midst of combat. What's your story? Incidentally, the longest I've ever gone without sleep was about 85 hours, with the help of a ton of coffee, Diet Coke, and Reeses Peanut Butter Cups.
  • Mental skills 'worse after sleep' (good news for drunks and insomniacs)

    01/11/2006 1:36:14 AM PST · by saganite · 55 replies · 717+ views
    BBC ^ | 11 Jan 06 | staff
    A person's thinking ability may be better after being awake for 24 hours or being drunk than it is following a good night's sleep, a study suggests. A University of Colorado team found understanding and short-term memory were worse in the minutes after waking. Their finding has implications for workers such as doctors on night-duty, who are awoken and immediately asked to perform important tasks. The study appears in the Journal of the American Medical Association. For a short period, at least, the effects of sleep inertia may be as bad as or worse than being legally drunk After the...
  • Less Sleep, More Energy

    01/16/2005 3:03:17 AM PST · by The Raven · 22 replies · 1,584+ views
    Barry Yeoman and Reader's Digest ^ | Oct 2005 | Barry Yeoman
    PATRICIA PRATTIS JENNINGS, 63, FIRST TOOK PROVIGIL during a 2003 trip to Europe. Her doctor thought the drug—meant to help users suffering from a lack of sleep stay awake without jittery side effects—might counteract the jet lag that had plagued her throughout four globe-hopping decades as a pianist with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Her first morning in Switzerland, she popped half a pill. Her usual fatigue disappeared almost instantly. "I felt great all day and for a number of days after that," she says. The drug worked so well that she gave her husband some when he complained of feeling...
  • Still reeling from the "healing" retreat

    08/20/2004 5:58:41 AM PDT · by bufferina · 83 replies · 2,178+ views
    This is my first post. I am posting in the hope that someone can explain what happened at this healing retreat which I attended recently. It was a healing retreat, but I am reluctant call it by name. The "leader" had given me a scholarship. I am sure she meant well. The session on Friday lasted from about 6 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Up again at 7 a.m. on Saturday and the sessions were to have lasted until about the same time that night, so I was told. Sunday would have run from 8:30 until 5 p.m. I left at...
  • Truckers to be allowed to drive longer hours

    04/24/2003 11:04:15 AM PDT · by Diddle E. Squat · 13 replies · 271+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | 4/24/03 | AP
    WASHINGTON - Truck drivers will be allowed to drive longer hours but must take more time off between shifts under the first changes since 1939 in the federal rule governing such drivers. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, an arm of the Transportation Department, is seeking to reduce fatigue-related accidents. Officials planned a news conference today to announce the changes, which take effect in January. A trucking industry official familiar with the changes said they would permit drivers to spend up to 11 straight hours behind the wheel, a one-hour increase from the current level. But truckers also will be...