Open windows and doors helped reduce carbon dioxide levels and
improve ventilation and air flow, which was related to better sleep
quality for the healthy young adults in the study.
“We spend nearly a third of our life in the bedroom environment, but
the air quality in our sleeping environment is often overlooked,”
said study author Dr. Asit Mishra of Eindhoven University of
Technology.
“Imagine this - you are in a confined space and have limited ability
to adjust the situation (since you are asleep) while you are
possibly surrounded by pollutants,” he told Reuters Health by phone.
“This is how things are in bed, covered under duvets or a blanket.”
For one night of the study, 17 volunteers slept with an open window
or internal door. On another night, the windows and door to the room
were kept closed. In the meantime, Mishra and colleagues monitored
carbon dioxide levels, temperature, background noise and humidity.
The study participants were asked not to drink alcoholic beverages
or caffeinated drinks, which could influence sleep. They each slept
alone, and the bedroom layout with furniture arrangement was kept
consistent.

For measuring sleep quality, participants wore an armband that
measures skin temperature, heat flux, bed temperature and skin
moisture levels. They also wore a sensor that tracked their
movements at night, including indications of restlessness.
Closed environments tended to have less background noise – but they
also had significantly higher carbon dioxide levels, which indicated
lower ventilation levels.
Open conditions were slightly cooler than closed, although humidity
levels were similar across settings, according to the report in the
journal Indoor Air.
Notably, carbon dioxide levels were lower when windows or doors were
open.
Overall, skin temperature and the bed temperature were higher in
closed conditions than open conditions. The number of awakenings and
sleep efficiency improved as carbon dioxide levels decreased.
[to top of second column] |

“Opening an internal door can be a reasonably good alternative if
you don’t want to open windows, either for noise concerns or
security concerns,” Mishra said.
A limitation of the study is that the motion sensor often slipped
off the sleepers at night.
“Sleep quality is affected by many factors, such as health and
emotional states, bedding conditions and different environmental
conditions, including noise levels and temperature,” said Dr. Nuno
Canha of the University of Lisbon in Portugal. Canha, who wasn’t
involved with this study, researches indoor air quality and sleep
during different ventilation patterns. He is also part of LIFE
Index-Air, a European research group that focuses on human exposure
to pollutants.
In a recent study, Canha and colleagues found that closed doors and
windows led to higher levels of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and
other substances such as formaldehyde.
“Sleep is essential to our life in several areas: health, well-being
and productivity,” Canha told Reuters Health by email. “The exposure
we are under while asleep is continuous . . . and we should play it
safe in order to breathe better air during sleep.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2BOsgOd Indoor Air, online November 21, 2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |