Another big change is that after 60 our body clock shifts noticeably and we will, on average, want to go to sleep two hours earlier than we did in our late teens or early 20s, often waking in the early morning, around 3am or 4am. This is thought to be driven by changes in our sex hormones (oestrogen in women, testosterone in men). “In your 60s, you’re getting up and going to bed about the time you got up and went to bed when you were 11 or 12,” says Russell Foster, a professor of circadian neuroscience at Oxford.
Even if we’re working less, we still need proper rest. “Scientific evidence points to the fact that we probably don’t need much less sleep in our 60s than we did in our 40s – it’s just we’re less good at achieving it,” says Prof Leschziner. “The focus needs to be on getting that balance right between maximising sleep quantity and quality, but not getting yourself into an absolute maelstrom of anxiety.”
So how can we shift sleep back in the right direction?
1. Get early evening light
A third of older adults report early morning awakening and/or difficulty staying asleep on a regular basis. Getting more light during the day helps us sleep better at night by boosting cortisol and suppressing melatonin, which helps regulate the sleep-wake cycle. “If you expose yourself to very bright light in the morning, as soon as you wake up, it’s going to shift your biological rhythm forward so you’ll fall asleep earlier,” says Prof Leschziner, who is also the author of The Secret World Of Sleep: Tales of Nightmares and Neuroscience. However, if you prefer to go to sleep later, avoid very bright light in the morning hours. “If you want to delay your body clock, because you’re getting up at 5am and are ready for bed at 8pm, then expose yourself to as much bright light as possible with a late afternoon/evening walk to shift your circadian rhythm.”
If it’s dark in the evening, you could use a bright light therapy lamp such as Lumie Vitamin L (£99) to regulate circadian rhythms, manage winter blues (SAD), and treat sleep disorders caused by shift work or jet lag. Using the lamp in the early evening helps “larks” shift their sleep patterns to a later time.
2. Consistent routine
According to Prof Foster, one of the easiest ways to achieve sound sleep is to go to bed and wake up at the same time every day. This routine reinforces exposure to environmental cues – especially light, but also food and exercise – that help train the circadian system. “Sleep quality is as important as sleep duration,” advises Prof Leschziner. “One of the things that retired people often do is get up when they want. That can lead to a variability of sleep timings, not great for sleep quality overall. Try to keep your sleep and wake timings as regular as possible.”
Lie-ins or sleeping late at weekends disrupt the circadian rhythm and you end up feeling “jet-lagged” on Monday. “It’s also independently associated with increased cardiovascular risk and metabolic syndrome, so difficulties with insulin, managing sugars and weight gain,” adds Dr Allie Hare, a consultant in sleep and ventilation at the Royal Brompton Hospital and president of the British Sleep Society.
Diet is another effective cue for regulating the circadian system. “You can use what you eat and what time you eat to entrain the circadian rhythm,” says Dr Hare. “We have clocks in our gut, and actually one of the ways in which our brain figures out what time of day it is, is whether you’re consuming a roast dinner or a bowl of cereal.”
3. Eat dinner earlier
A late or heavy meal high in sugar and fat can make our sleep lighter because our body is using its energy to digest food instead of focusing on the processes that need to take place when we sleep. “A high protein supper, such as boiled eggs or baked beans on toast, is ideal,” advises Prof Foster. Limit caffeine after 2pm, too. “Alcohol is particularly good at disrupting REM sleep, which is where we lay down memory, so that becomes increasingly an issue as we get older,” says Dr Hare.
4. Stop fluids two hours before bed
“The question that I am most often asked about sleep is ‘How do I stop needing to get up at night to pee?’, or, expressed more formally, to avoid urination (nocturia),” says Prof Foster. The hormone vasopressin regulates urine production and its rhythm changes with age, so he advises talking to your GP about taking desmopressin, a synthetic hormone which can help manage nocturia by mimicking vasopressin.
Prof Foster also notes the importance of vitamin D on sleep in older adults. “We know light is important for kicking off vitamin D synthesis, but most window glass blocks UVB, which the skin needs to make vitamin D. So sitting by a window can be great for your circadian health – you’re getting that morning photon shower to set the clock – but it won’t give you sufficient vitamin UVB exposure to make vitamin D. Have a blood test to check iron levels and vitamin D.”
5. Retrain your brain
We are creatures of habit, according to Prof Leschziner. “For a good sleeper, there’s almost a Pavlovian association between the bed and being asleep,” he explains. “The bed is relaxing and conducive to sleep. But if your sleep has been disrupted for a prolonged period of time, whether due to something biological like menopause, or a significant period of stress, that breaks down those positive associations and rebuilds very potent associations with bed being a place where you’re awake and anxious, and so it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
“This is why there has been a move towards a form of non-drug-based treatment to address insomnia, cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I), in essence a form of brain retraining, trying to break negative associations and rebuild positive associations. We know it helps around 80 per cent of people.”
In the short-term, your GP may prescribe melatonin supplements or CBT-I to re-establish a healthy sleep pattern. “But other key aspects of this treatment include leaving your bed and going into another room to read or listen to music if you are awake for more than 20 minutes, and also a brief period where you are encouraged to partially sleep-deprive yourself.”
6. Exercise strategically
Exercise in some form can help sleep/wake timing and reduce insomnia, particularly if it is outside under natural light in the morning. Because the homeostatic drive for sleep reduces as you age, try to move more, says Dr Hare. Similar to how a battery drains, the longer you are awake, the more a compound called adenosine builds up in your brain, creating “sleep pressure”.
Physical activity speeds up this metabolic process, increasing adenosine levels and causing your body to crave rest and recovery. Prof Leschziner explains: “Aerobic exercise is very good for increasing the depth of your non-REM sleep. It doesn’t have to be in a gym or on a rowing machine. A nice, long walk in daylight every day will impact the quality of your night-time sleep.”
Prof Foster agrees, adding that it’s good to exercise at the same time each day to reinforce the circadian cycle. “People with companion animals, especially dogs, report better sleep due to the exercise and light exposure they provide.”
7. Don’t obsess
It’s important not to pathologise age-related changes in sleep. “We think of sleep as this rebellious monster we have to bludgeon into submission, whereas actually we should think of it as a cuddly teddy that is sometimes a bit difficult to embrace,” says Prof Foster.
Don’t expect to sleep like a 20-year-old, agrees Dr Hare – sleep drops from 7-8 hours to 6-7 hours a night and waking up at 4am or 5am is pretty normal in your 60s. It’s important not to let your sleep become yet another thing you’re worried about. The occasional bad night’s sleep won’t kill us. Instead, she recommends evidence-based strategies to quieten the busy mind. “Have a 30-60 minute buffer zone between work, social media, news cycles, all the things that add to worries and anxieties, and going to bed.
“If you constantly run through lists of all the things you need to do, there’s a strategy known as ‘cognitive control and constructive worry’. You have a notebook or download sheets you fill out. Essentially you’re getting all this stuff out from your brain on to paper in a very prescribed fashion. It stops you feeling powerless.”
8. Limit naps to 30 minutes
Longer naps may be counterproductive, as recovery from an extended nap can leave us feeling groggy with lowered alertness (known as “sleep inertia”). Naps within six hours of bedtime reduce sleep pressure.
“Quite frankly, if somebody in their 60s or 70s says to me: ‘I can sleep anytime, anywhere, whenever I want’, that raises anxiety in me,” says Prof Leschziner. “It makes me wonder whether they’ve got a sleep disorder, like obstructive sleep apnea, which is associated with getting older and putting on weight, and so the muscles of the airway become a little laxer. Or maybe the circuitry in their brain is degenerating and causing them to have sleep attacks during the day.”
There is evidence frequent napping during the day may be a precursor of neurodegenerative disease such as Parkinson’s.
9. Beware sleep trackers
None of the experts I spoke to are particularly keen on consumer sleep tracking devices, which can increase sleep-related anxiety. Measures of REM versus non-REM or even “deep sleep” are more difficult to assess from currently available devices like Fitbits. “They’re based on movement algorithms as opposed to pulse wave changes,” Dr Hare explains. “So if you lie very still, it thinks you’re asleep.
“Additionally, we have found that if someone has had a really good night’s sleep, but we falsify that data to make them think they’ve had a really bad night’s sleep, they will perform as if that’s the true data. Not only will they feel like they’ve not slept well, but in cognitive testing, they will perform worse. The best guide, truly and honestly, is how you feel when you wake up before you flip to your tracker.”
Sleep apps are not ideal for the ageing community, agrees Prof Foster, who is also the author of Life Time: The New Science of the Body Clock, and How It Can Revolutionise Your Sleep and Health, because most were developed and tested on Californian undergraduates.
10. Have a hot bath before bed
The “warm bath effect” shows cooling core body temperature before bed improves sleep quality, says Matthew Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. When you get out of a hot bath (of around 41C), your core body temperature actually plummets and this increases the amount of deep sleep by 18 minutes, and decreases time awake by 20 minutes.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness/wellbeing/sleep/why-sleep-gets-worse-after-60/