Close Menu
OMG Healthy
  • Home
  • News & Trends
  • Food & Nutrition
  • Health & Wellness
  • Fitness
  • Beauty
  • Apparel & Gear
  • More Articles
Trending Now

The 16 Best Foundations for Mature Skin, Recommended by Experts and Editors

April 22, 2026

This Simple Habit Change Could Decrease Heart Disease Risk by 50%, Scientists Say

April 22, 2026

Magnesium Vs. Vitamin D Deficiency: Dietitians Reveal the Surprising Link

April 22, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
OMG Healthy Wednesday, April 22
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Newsletter
  • Home
  • News & Trends
  • Food & Nutrition
  • Health & Wellness
  • Fitness
  • Beauty
  • Apparel & Gear
  • More Articles
OMG Healthy
Home » This Simple Habit Change Could Decrease Heart Disease Risk by 50%, Scientists Say
Health & Wellness

This Simple Habit Change Could Decrease Heart Disease Risk by 50%, Scientists Say

News RoomBy News RoomApril 22, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Copy Link Email
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
3 min read

  • Preventing heart disease takes a multi-faceted approach.
  • Perhaps lesser discussed than diet and exercise as interventions is getting proper sleep.
  • A new study looks at how a person’s bedtime impacts their heart disease risk. Experts weigh in.

You probably know that a heart-healthy diet and regular exercise can make big strides in lowering heart disease risk. What may be lesser considered as a channel to heart health is sleep. And it’s not just getting it that matters—the time one falls asleep appears to play a part in how well a person’s heart works, or doesn’t.

Meet the Experts: John La Puma, M.D., board-certified internist and sleep specialist; and Srihari Naidu, M.D., cardiologist and professor of medicine at New York Medical College.

A new study published in BMC Cardiovascular Disorders looked at how bedtime inconsistency impacted middle aged peoples’ risk of experiencing a heart attack, stroke, heart failure, or cardiovascular-related death over a 10 year period compared to those who went to bed at roughly the same time nightly. The findings were alarming, and not the kind you can snooze. Below, doctors weigh in on the findings.

What did the study find?

Researchers followed 3,231 Finnish adults, all born in 1966, each of whom wore a research-grade wrist sleep monitor for seven days that tracked when they fell asleep, when they woke, and the midpoint of their sleep period. After 10 years, researchers cross referenced participant data with Finland’s national health registry for heart attacks, strokes, heart failure hospitalizations, and cardiovascular deaths.

With that data, researchers organized participants into three groups: those who had a regular bedtime, those who had a fairly regular bedtime (meaning, they fell asleep within an hour of the same time nightly), and those who had an irregular bedtime (meaning, they fell asleep within nearly two hours of the same time nightly). Even after researchers controlled for standard age and sex-related cardiac risk factors, those with irregular bedtimes showed a doubled risk of heart disease compared to their counterparts.

Surprisingly, this risk was predicted only by irregular bedtimes—irregular wakeup times didn’t have the same effect. “And the risk was concentrated in people sleeping under eight hours, suggesting that short sleepers with erratic bedtimes get hit twice,” explains John La Puma, M.D., board-certified internist and sleep specialist.

Why is bedtime consistency important—for heart health and overall wellness?

These finding indicates that not only sleep length and quality, but sleep time matters for heart health. Why? “Your body’s master clock is a cluster of about 20,000 nerve cells in the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus,” says Dr. La Puma. “It orchestrates a nightly sequence of repair events timed to when you fall asleep. Blood pressure dips. Cortisol clears. Heart rate slows. Blood vessels repair. When your bedtime jumps around by an hour or two from night to night, you’re giving your heart jet lag.”

When you think about it that way, it makes sense. Also, if you struggle to fall asleep at consistent times due to stress, for example, you may build up more total body inflammation over time, which contributes to heart disease risk—specifically, it may tick up factors like hypertension and obesity, adds Srihari Naidu, M.D., cardiologist and professor of medicine at New York Medical College.

It’s worth noting that the American Heart Association recently added sleep regularity to its list of essential components for heart health, alongside diet, exercise, and not smoking, says Dr. La Puma.

The bottom line

The main takeaway here is that a bedtime and general sleep hygiene is important—even sacred. “Build a bedtime routine and protect it,” says Dr. La Puma. “I recommend a wind down ritual an hour before you want to be asleep. That includes dimming the lights, not having a blue light screens, and a cup of chamomile tea or an analog book or soft music.”

If you struggle to sleep, see a doctor—many sleep disorders, such as sleep apnea, are treatable, and getting them checked out can ultimately improve your quality of life and heart disease risk, says Dr Naidu.

“We oftentimes forget sleep is there for a reason, and that we should treat that time as important,” says Dr. Naidu. “Just because we can’t remember it doesn’t mean nothing is happening during that time. And as it turns out what is happening is quite important over the long term.” He recommends shooting for a bedtime between 10 and midnight or earlier, sticking to that time, and getting seven to eight hours of sleep every night.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email Copy Link

Related Articles

7 Subtle Symptoms of Kidney Disease Doctors Want You to Know

April 22, 2026

Experts Reveal the Number-1 Sign Your Metabolism Is Slowing Down

April 21, 2026

6 Subtle Symptoms of a ‘Silent Heart Attack,’ According to Cardiologists

April 21, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo

Top News

Denise Austin Shares 8-Minute Workout to ‘Boost Your Metabolism’

February 23, 2026

Scientists Find Getting More Magnesium May Stave Off Dementia

February 24, 2026

31 High-Protein Snacks Dietitians Want You to Add to Your Menu

February 24, 2026

Scientists Found 4 Simple Habits They Say Lower Your ‘True Age’

February 24, 2026

Don't Miss

A Dietitian Ate Sweet Potato Every Day for a Week—Here’s What Happened

April 22, 20267 Mins Read

5 min readAs a dietitian, I spend a lot of time talking about food, but…

The 15 Best Body Lotions for Aging Skin, According to Dermatologists

April 21, 2026

Experts Reveal the Number-1 Sign Your Metabolism Is Slowing Down

April 21, 2026

Trainers Share the Best Low-Impact Exercises for Women Over 50 to Build Strength

April 21, 2026
About Us
About Us

OMG Healthy is your one-stop website for the latest health, fitness and wellness news and guides, follow us now for the articles you love.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

The 16 Best Foundations for Mature Skin, Recommended by Experts and Editors

April 22, 2026

This Simple Habit Change Could Decrease Heart Disease Risk by 50%, Scientists Say

April 22, 2026

Magnesium Vs. Vitamin D Deficiency: Dietitians Reveal the Surprising Link

April 22, 2026
Most Popular

Scientists Find Getting More Magnesium May Stave Off Dementia

February 24, 2026

31 High-Protein Snacks Dietitians Want You to Add to Your Menu

February 24, 2026

Scientists Found 4 Simple Habits They Say Lower Your ‘True Age’

February 24, 2026
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.