Updated
Updated · geneonline · May 27
Study Finds Caffeine Disrupts 8 Hours of Sleep by Altering Brain Activity
Updated
Updated · geneonline · May 27

Study Finds Caffeine Disrupts 8 Hours of Sleep by Altering Brain Activity

4 articles · Updated · geneonline · May 27
  • Eight hours of sleep may still be less restorative after caffeine intake, with the study finding sleep quality declines even when total sleep time appears adequate.
  • Brain activity during rest—not just the ability to fall asleep—appears to drive that effect, as caffeine alters the neural processes tied to deep, restorative sleep.
  • Evening caffeine was highlighted as particularly disruptive, suggesting people who feel they sleep normally after coffee may still lose some of sleep’s recovery benefits.
  • The findings shift attention from whether caffeine causes insomnia to how it changes sleep architecture, broadening concerns beyond sleep duration alone.
You get 8 hours of sleep, but is your coffee secretly preventing your brain's essential nightly repair?
Are long-term coffee drinkers immune to its sleep-disrupting effects, or is there a hidden neurological cost?