Regular three-minute bouts of resistance exercise at home spread over 4 hours is enough to improve sleep quantity and quality, researchers have found.
Current recommendations discourage intense exercise before going to bed, on the grounds that it increases body temperature and heart rate, which can result in poorer sleep quality.
While activity breaks can improve metabolism after a meal, it is not clear if they have any impact on sleep. Poor sleep is associated with an increased risk of cardiometabolic disorders, such as coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes.
To explore this further, the researchers recruited 30 non-smokers, aged 18 to 40, to their study. All of them reported clocking up more than five hours of sedentary time during the day at work and two hours in the evening.
To capture habitual physical activity and sleep patterns, participants wore an activity tracker worn continuously on their non-dominant wrist for seven consecutive days. And they were asked to record the periods they did not wear it, the time they went to bed, and when they woke up.
They were also asked to record any physical activity when not wearing the activity tracker, such as swimming or contact sport, and to record activities known to be inaccurately identified by the tracker, such as stationary cycling or yoga.
Each participant completed two four-hour sessions in a controlled laboratory environment on the same day of the week, starting at around about 5pm-5.30pm, and separated by a minimum period of 6 days.
In one session, participants remained seated for 4 hours; in the other, they did 3 minutes of simple resistance exercise every 30 minutes over the 4-hour period. Afterwards participants returned to their normal, real-life environment.
Each activity break included three rounds of three exercises: chair squats, calf raises, and standing knee raises with straight leg hip extensions for 20 seconds each, in time with a video recording of a person doing the same exercises.
The activity tracker data showed that before the experiment, participants spent an average of 7 hours 47 minutes asleep, 10 hours 31 minutes sitting down, and 4 hours 55 minutes engaged in vigorous physical activity a day. Three out of four slept for the recommended 7 hours a night, while the rest slept either less than that (21 per cent) or longer than 9 hours (4 per cent).
The results, which are based on 28 participants, show that after the activity breaks, participants slept for an additional 27 minutes on average, compared with prolonged sitting.
The average sleep duration was 7 hours 12 minutes, compared with 6 hours and 45 minutes after prolonged sitting. And while the time at which participants attempted to go to sleep was more or less the same, average wake times differed. Participants woke, on average, at 7.35 am after the prolonged sitting intervention and 8.06 am after regular activity breaks.
What’s more, there were no significant differences in sleep efficiency – uninterrupted sleep – or the number of awakenings during the night between the two interventions, indicating that activity breaks did not disrupt subsequent sleep, say the researchers.
Due to the small group, the research team said further studies, involving larger numbers of people in their normal home environment, and for a longer period, were therefore needed..
However, they added: “These results add to a growing body of evidence that indicates evening exercise does not disrupt sleep quality, despite current sleep recommendations to the contrary… Adults accrue the longest periods of sedentary time and consume almost half their daily energy intake during the evening, added to which insulin sensitivity is lower at this time.”
By extending sleep duration, especially in those who sleep less than the recommended nightly total, activity breaks may potentially reduce cardiometabolic disease risk over the long term, they suggest.
The resistance exercises used in their study are simple to carry out, do not require any equipment, and can even be done while streaming content, potentially increasing the chances of keeping up the routine, they add.
But they highlight: “While existing research indicates that evening exercise may not adversely impact sleep, the mechanisms by which [it] influences sleep quality remain unclear.”
The study is published in the open access journal BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine.