Dose-response relationship between evening exercise and sleep

Josh Leota(Monash University), David M. Presby(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Flora Le(Monash University), Mark É. Czeisler(Harvard University), Luis Mascaro(Monash University), Emily R. Capodilupo(University of Massachusetts Boston), Joshua F. Wiley(Monash University), Sean P. A. Drummond(Monash University), Shantha M. W. Rajaratnam(Monash University), Elise R. Facer‐Childs(Monash University)
Nature Communications
April 15, 2025
Cited by 35Open Access
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Abstract

Public health guidelines recommend exercise as a key lifestyle intervention for promoting and maintaining healthy sleep function and reducing disease risk. However, strenuous evening exercise may disrupt sleep due to heightened sympathetic arousal. This study examines the association between strenuous evening exercise and objective sleep, using data from 14,689 physically active individuals who wore a biometric device during a one-year study interval (4,084,354 person-nights). Here we show later exercise timing and higher exercise strain are associated with delayed sleep onset, shorter sleep duration, lower sleep quality, higher nocturnal resting heart rate, and lower nocturnal heart rate variability. Regardless of strain, exercise bouts ending ≥4 hours before sleep onset are not associated with changes in sleep. Our results suggest evening exercise—particularly involving high exercise strain—may disrupt subsequent sleep and nocturnal autonomic function. Individuals aiming to improve sleep health may benefit from concluding exercise at least 4 hours before sleep onset or electing lighter strain exercises within this window. Exercise is essential for health, but strenuous evening exercise may disrupt sleep. Here, using 4-million nights of objective data, the authors show strenuous exercise ending within 4 hours of bedtime is associated with disruptions to subsequent sleep and nocturnal autonomic function.


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