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Sleep deprivation can cause dry and sore eyes, as well as more serious problems in the long term. OsakaWayne Studios/Getty Images
  • Scientists recently studied the impact poor sleep can have on the eyes in a trial using mice.
  • They learned that sleep deprivation can cause the cornea to lose its ability to repair itself properly, which may lead to issues such as having dry eyes.
  • The researchers also found that eye drops with antioxidants can help repair the damage caused by sleep deprivation.

While scientists know that sleep deprivation has a negative effect on the body, they are still researching how it affects different organs.

Researchers from China and the U.S. recently published a study in Stem Cell Reports on how poor sleep can affect the eyes. They found that sleep deprivation can affect both stem cells in the cornea and the tear film surface of the cornea.

Getting a good night’s sleep on a regular basis is important, but according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than one-third of adults don’t get enough sleep. Doctors recommend that adults get at least 7 hours of sleep per night.

The CDC reports that not getting enough sleep can cause a myriad of health issues, such as having a higher risk for obesity, developing diabetes, and high blood pressure.

Part of the issue contributing to so many people not getting enough rest is having a sleep disorder. The National Institutes of Health reports that around 40 million Americans have a sleep disorder.

Some sleep disorders include:

  • Sleep apnea
  • Restless leg syndrome
  • Insomnia
  • Narcolepsy

For those who are not affected by a sleep disorder, the best way to regularly get enough sleep is to practice good sleep hygiene. People can accomplish this by going to bed at the same time every night, avoiding screens 1-2 hours before bed, and not drinking alcohol before bed.

The researchers in this study used mice to learn more about how sleep deprivation affects the eyes.

The researchers were interested to find out to what degree sleep deprivation may affect stem cells in the cornea.

The cornea is the transparent front window of the eye with an overlying tear film that acts as a barrier that helps protect the eye against infection and keeps the eyes comfortable.

As Dr. Neil Neimark, a board certified family physician in functional medicine who applies stem cell therapy in his practice, noted in a TEDx Talks podcast, stem cells have “healing power” and “all tissue repair in the body is initiated by stem cells.”

The researchers of the current study assessed gene expression in the mice after 2 days of sleep deprivation and then after 10 days of sleep deprivation.

At the 2-day point, the researchers found that 287 genes were significantly upregulated and 88 were downregulated in corneas. At the 10-day point, they saw 272 significantly upregulated genes and 150 downregulated genes.

The authors tested the mice after 1 and 2 months of further sleep deprivation and found that the transparency of the cornea was reduced and the ocular surface was rough.

While stem cells were upregulated in the sleep-deprived mice early on, it eventually led to what the authors referred to as an “early manifestation of limbal stem cell deficiency.” After being upregulated for so long, the stem cells became depleted.

“Short-term consequences of insufficient sleep or delayed sleep cause ocular discomfort, including dryness, pain, pruritus, and hyperemia of the eye,” the authors note.

Despite these issues, the authors observed that treating the mice with damaged corneas with eye drops containing antioxidants helped restore the eye health of the mice.

Dr. Howard R. Krauss, a surgical neuro-ophthalmologist and director of Neuro-Ophthalmology for the Pacific Neuroscience Institute at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, who was not involved in the study, spoke to Medical News Today about the findings.

“The design of the study was to study chemical and cellular changes in the ocular surface of sleep-deprived mice, revealing indeed that there are damaging effects, which shed light on mechanisms which may be at play in human symptoms and disease,” Dr. Krauss said.

While Dr. Krauss thought the study was helpful at showing how sleep deprivation can potentially affect humans, he noted a limitation.

“A weakness of the study is the methodology by which sleep deprivation is induced in mice, who are in cages, perched on sticks to remain above a water-filled bottom – when the mouse falls asleep, it falls into the water, immediately wakes up, and climbs back up onto the stick,” Dr. Krauss explained.

Dr. Krauss said the method used to induce sleep deprivation raises the question of how much of the chemical and cellular change they observed was “purely secondary to sleep deprivation and how much may be a stress reaction to the means by which sleep deprivation has been engineered.”

“Nonetheless, the study refocuses our attention on sleep deprivation and leads us to think that the scope of damaging effects of sleep deprivation may be far [broader] than we realize,” he said.

“As such, the human need for sleep for maintenance of good health becomes more obvious every day.”
— Dr. Howard R. Krauss