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One Sleepless Night Harms Your Brain: The Alarming Alzheimer's Connection

19/06/2026 07:14 - Salud

Cerebro humano artístico con representación de conexiones neuronales iluminadas en tonos azules y violeta, fondo oscuro con efectos de luz científicos modernos

What Happens to Your Brain When You Don't Sleep?

Your brain relies on deep sleep to activate the glymphatic system, a cleaning mechanism that flushes out toxins accumulated during your waking hours. Even one night of sleep deprivation can disrupt this critical process.

The Glymphatic System: Your Brain's Dishwasher

The glymphatic system was discovered in 2012 by neuroscientist Maiken Nedergaard at the University of Rochester. It functions as a drainage system that removes metabolic waste from the brain during deep sleep.

How does it work? During sleep, brain cells shrink by up to 60%, creating spaces that allow cerebrospinal fluid to flow and wash toxins into the circulatory system for elimination. Think of it as a nightly deep-clean for your most vital organ.

The Alzheimer's Connection

Beta-amyloid is one of the proteins that naturally builds up during the day and must be cleared during sleep. When sleep is insufficient or of poor quality:

  • Beta-amyloid plaques accumulate between neurons
  • Tau protein tangles form inside brain cells
  • Chronic inflammation increases in brain tissue
  • Cognitive decline accelerates over time
Alarming Finding

Brain imaging studies showed that a single sleepless night increases beta-amyloid levels in the brain by 5% to 10% in key regions responsible for memory and learning.

Immediate Effects of Sleep Deprivation

Losing one night of sleep doesn't just affect you long-term. Immediate consequences include:

Affected Function Consequence Duration
Memory Difficulty consolidating new memories Days
Attention 30% reduction in concentration ability 24-48 hours
Reflexes Equivalent to driving with 0.08% blood alcohol While sleep-deprived
Emotions Heightened amygdala reactivity, less emotional control Variable

Recommendations to Protect Your Brain

A study from the Mount Sinai Cardiovascular Institute published in Nature (June 18, 2026) analyzed data from nearly 91,000 people and confirmed that a healthy lifestyle can counteract even adverse genetic predispositions.

Recommended Sleep Hours
  • Adults (18-64 years): 7-9 hours
  • Older adults (65+): 7-8 hours
  • Teenagers: 8-10 hours
Exercise & Sleep Combined

The American Heart Association recommends:

  • 150 minutes weekly of moderate activity
  • Avoid screens 1 hour before bed
  • Maintain regular sleep schedules
Warning Signs

Consult a sleep specialist if you experience:

  • Chronic insomnia (lasting more than 3 months)
  • Excessive daytime sleepiness
  • Persistent memory problems
  • Loud snoring or breathing pauses (possible sleep apnea)

Sources: Mount Sinai Cardiovascular Institute, Nature, CDC, American Heart Association.

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