Sleep Mate 3

NZ$299.95

Approx USD$179.17

Everyone needs it, but not everyone gets enough of it. It’s not sex; it’s sleep. Humans are animals requiring sleep to continue the daily routine: school, work, gym, internship, family, friends, and so on.

Sleep disorders are a highly common medical issue that affects millions of people each year. While some people suffer from mild sleeping problems, such as the occasional nightmare, others have extremely severe sleep disorders that can negatively affect their health if left untreated.

At some point in life, you are likely to suffer from lack of sleep. However, while your lifestyle, work demands and family responsibilities may keep you from getting the sleep you need, a chronic lack of sleep can trigger the development of serious conditions, including heart disease, depression and hypertension. Common symptoms of lack of sleep include fatigue, blurry vision and irritability.


In fact, 95 percent of people suffering from a sleep disorder remain undiagnosed. This staggering number means that a huge number of people aren’t getting the treatment they need, putting them in danger of permanently damaging their health.

Do you Wake Up Tired?

Your Sleep Doesn't feel Restorative ?

"In today’s “Health Journal” column, Melinda Beck reports that many people who think they are getting enough shut-eye may actually be getting poor quality sleep, with not enough of the restorative phases. The REM, or Rapid Eye Movement phase, in which dreaming occurs, is crucial for preserving memories, learning, creativity, problem solving and emotional balance, while deep, or slow-wave sleep, when the body releases human growth hormone, is necessary for physical development and repair. However, both of these sleep phases decline with age and are vulnerable to disruptions, including caffeine, alcohol and anxiety (which can even include anxiety about lack of sleep).

How do you know if you haven’t gotten enough restorative sleep?
One tip-off is if you have trouble waking up in the morning and feel excessively sleepy during the day". Source

 


Click to enlarge

Insomnia

Insomnia is a sleep problem that is defined as inadequate or poor-quality sleep due to difficulty falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep, waking up too early and not being able to get back to sleep and/or waking up feeling unrefreshed. According to NSF poll data, insomnia is the most common of all sleep problems and affects approximately 58 percent of adults.

There data also show that while insomnia affects people of nearly every demographic, it is especially prevalent among elderly adults; sixty-seven percent of older adults (age 65 and older) report that they have trouble sleeping at least a few nights a week. Women, who experience higher rates of anxiety and depression and hormonal fluctuations associated with menstruation, pregnancy and menopause, are also more likely to suffer from insomnia than men, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Negative impact od jobs on Sleep, shift workers are feeling the effects of their schedules. A study of 437 day workers and 246 rotating shift workers at the Universidad de Buenos Aires in Argentina found that shift workers have seriously lower levels of serotonin, a hormone that plays a role in regulating sleep and mood, than their day-working counterparts. Unfortunately, lower levels of serotonin are associated with anger, depression, and anxiety, as well as poor sleep. Another study, conducted by Harvard Medical School—this one of more than 78,000 women who worked rotating night shifts over a 10-year period—found that shift work significantly increased a woman’s risk of breast cancer.

A second team of Harvard researchers studied the same group, and they found that women who worked a rotating night shift at least three nights per month for 15 or more years had an increased risk of colorectal cancer.

And a third team of Harvard researchers studied more than 53,000 women who worked rotating shifts and found that night work increased the women’s risk of endometrial cancer by 47 percent—and actually doubled the risk of endometrial cancer in obese shift workers.

It’s this type of research that led the World Health Organization late in 2007 to classify shift work as a “probable” cause of cancer—a position that the American Cancer Society indicates it is likely to follow

It’s a seemingly insignificant deficit, but two hours of sleep loss, studies report, have the same effect on your brain as knocking back two or three 12-ounce beers. It’s also an amount that week after week, year after year, may build up to a huge effect.

 

Disrupted Sleep
Any condition in which your sleep doesn’t follow the typical sleep phase cycle or doesn’t stay in one or more cycles for long enough is a disrupted sleep disorder. Those who have disrupted sleep tend to not only get less sleep but also to not experience as deep of sleep. Unfortunately, this often means that these individuals don’t reach the levels of sleep necessary to be considered “restorative sleep.”

Give your Wife or Mum the gift of sleep

That sleepless night that makes you grouchy and tired the next day can be a killer — literally. New research shows that getting less than 5 hours of sleep a night increases your risk of death from cardiovascular disease. In a study of 4,600 men and women aged 35 to 55, researchers at University College London and the University of Warwick in the United Kingdom found that women who slept less than 8 hours per night had a higher risk of dying from cardiovascular disease than men. Differences in hormone levels may play a role.

According to data recently published in the journal Sleep, women who slept less than 5 hours per night had significantly higher levels of the inflammatory markers that are indicators for heart disease.
Source

Lack of sleep could be fatal: Scientists uncover 86 disorders linked to lack of shut-eye

Read more:

Sleep deprivation

A considerable amount of sleep-related behavior is apparently hard-wired into human biology - humans in all cultures get tired, require sleep for good health, and have similar symptoms when sleep deprived

"Lack of sleep can affect your immune system. Studies show that people who don't get quality sleep or enough sleep are more likely to get sick after being exposed to a virus, such as a common cold virus. Lack of sleep can also affect how fast you recover if you do get sick.

During sleep, your immune system releases proteins called cytokines, some of which help promote sleep. Certain cytokines need to increase when you have an infection or inflammation, or when you're under stress. Sleep deprivation may decrease production of these protective cytokines. In addition, infection-fighting antibodies and cells are reduced during periods when you don't get enough sleep." Source

The body and brain require adequate hours of sleep to perform optimally. Sleep deprivation is a medical condition that affects the normal functioning of the body and brain due to lack of sleep. Though it is not considered a disorder, sleep deprivation can effect general well-being. Problems like weak memory, hand-eye co-ordination and reasoning abilities can surface during bouts of sleep deprivation.

Indications of sleep deprivation include drowsiness during the day, brief spells of sleep and falling into sleep immediately after lying down. Sleep deprivation needs to be addressed as prolonged periods may affect the immune system

The long term consequences of sleep deprivation affect the restorative functions of the body, decreasing the quality of life. Symptoms for these sleep disorders include the inability to fall asleep or stay asleep, breathing or snoring problems, frequent awakenings, stops in breathing during sleep, dozing off in day activities, difficulty concentrating, excessive sleepiness, profuse sweating, excessive limb movements during sleep, leg cramps or “crawling” feelings, or abnormal behavior at night. Despite the fact about 70 million Americans suffer from a sleep disorder, many cases remain undiagnosed.

1. Lack of Sleep Makes You Drunk

According to researchers sleep deprivation is as bad as alcohol consumption in how it affects our reflexes and critical thinking ability. It makes us dangerous drivers and bad decision makers. Consider the tragedy of the Exxon Valdez or just what could happen if you drift off while driving. Getting sleep could save your life and/or someone else’s.

2. Lack of Sleep Makes You Fat

Not getting enough sleep is a double whammy on the chemicals in your body. Leptin levels drop when you don’t get enough sleep. Leptin is responsible for making you feel full. Conversely lack of sleep increases your levels of ghrelin, which signals your appetite. So you get hungrier and you don’t feel full when you eat.

On top of that, sleep affects the function of your prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that deals with processing inhibitions. So not only are you hungry and insatiable, but you’re far more likely to make bad choices and eat junk food.5 And it starts early. A recent study shows teens who get fewer than eight hours per night of sleep have an average BMI of 3.8-4.7% higher than their counterparts who get regular sleep.

3. Lack of Sleep Can Make You Crazy and/or Kill You

Lack of sleep puts you at risk not only for obesity, but also for heart disease, heart attacks, hypertension, and diabetes. A lack of sleep has been shown to lead to or worsen type 2 diabetes.7 It can also increase your risk for colon cancer.8 If you're lucky and avoid a fatal disease, you might just go crazy - sufferers of sleep apnea have been shown to be twice as likely to develop dementia as they age.9 Recent Alzheimer’s research also suggests it is during our sleep that our bodies clean up any “plaque” in our brains. A build-up of this plaque is related to the onset of Alzheimer’s. A lack of sleep, therefore, could put you at a higher risk for developing the disease.

4. Lack of Sleep Makes You Less Manly

According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, University of Chicago scientists found sleep deprived research subjects suffered a decrease in testosterone levels the equivalent of aging 10 to 15 years. Low testosterone cannot only effect your sex life, but your energy level and ability to concentrate. For younger men proper testosterone levels also play an important role in forming strength, muscle mass, and bone mass needed for the rest of their lives.Source

Sleep Deprivation causes:

Not allowing enough time for sleep
Sleep disorders
Constant worry or stress
Repeated awakenings (noisy, loud roommates or neighbors)
Night shifts
Crossing time zones (frequent flyers)
Medical illness causing pain, difficulty breathing, etc. (asthma, flu, common cold, sports injury, etc.)

Sleep deprived symptoms:

Sleep deprivation - As a cause of death, Sleep deprivation - As a cause of depression, Sleep deprivation - As a cause of diabetes, Sleep deprivation - As a cause of obesity, Sleep deprivation - Effects on growth, Sleep deprivation - Effects on the brain, Sleep deprivation - Impairment of ability,

During sleep, our bodies perform a number of functions which are triggered by the night-time hormone called melatonin. This hormone slows down the body’s respiratory system, and clears our cells of toxins. So when we do not get the sleep at night, this hormone is not activated, and we become more susceptible to various health problems.

Prolonged periods of sleep deprivation can lead to memory loss, nausea and a weaker immune system. Sleep deprived persons are also known to succumb to
delirium,
hallucinations,
nausea,
alcoholism,
involuntary rapid eye movement,
slurred speech
weight gain

Sleep deprivation also affects our ability to perform physical tasks. Workers on night shift show not just declining performance but also difficulty in comprehending commands. Physical symptoms include
awkwardness in walking, picking up and lifting objects.

One of the serious consequences of sleep deprivation is on the body’s ability to absorb glucose, leading to
Type 2 diabetes. As serious is the impact on the functioning of the brain. Studies have proved that inadequate sleep affects
memory performance.

Heart disease and mental ailments like bipolar disorder and psychosis have been linked to sleep deprivation. Rapid eye movement (REM) is also believed to aggravate clinical depression in affected persons. As for children, inadequate sleep is often the reason for their irritability and display of violent moods.

 

Trouble waking up on time
Falling asleep or getting extremely sleepy during activities such as driving

Studies show that 85 percent of police officers, 80 percent of regional pilots, and 48 percent of air-traffic controllers nod off on the job. And a frightening 41 percent of medical workers admit they’ve made fatigue-related errors. In one survey alone, 19 percent report “worsening” a patient’s condition. What’s more, the Exxon Valdez grounding, the space shuttle Challenger accident, and the Three Mile Island nuclear accident have all been blamed, at least in part, on fatigue related to sleep loss.

Having a hard time staying awake
Needing a day-time nap
Short-term memory loss

A 2001 study at Chicago Medical Institute suggested that sleep deprivation may be linked to more serious diseases, such as heart disease and mental illnesses including psychosis and bipolar disorder.[18] The link between sleep deprivation and psychosis (psychiatric disorders) was further documented in 2007 through a study at Harvard Medical School and the University of California at Berkeley. The study revealed, using MRI scans, that lack of sleep causes the brain to become incapable of putting an emotional event into the proper perspective and incapable of making a controlled, suitable response to the event...

Uncontrolled emotional responses
It has long been suspected that sleep deprivation can have significant effect on mood. Many of us feel irritable and distractible if we haven’t slept enough, and you may have had the experience of being up all night and feeling a little bit “high” in the morning. It has also been known for centuries that mood disorders are very commonly associated with sleep disturbances, and sleep disturbance is often the first sign that someone with mood problems is running into trouble. So mood and sleep must be linked in some way.

Schumann Shield Package

Make the Schumman frequencies strong in your home ,and see the difference in moods and sleep,, Source

Dark circles under the eyes, aching muscles, dizziness, headaches, hyperactivity and hypertension are other symptoms sleep deprived persons are know to suffer from.
Physiological effects
When you are suffering from insomnia, the physical effects of sleep deprivation include exhaustion, fatigue and a general lack of energy. These might seem somewhat obvious, but it then translates into even bigger problems, such as emotional instability, mood swings, stress, pessimism, and anger. Recent studies have shown that those who are too tired to drive have the same characteristics as those who have a high blood alcohol level, and another study found that those who feel like they are going to fall asleep are actually worse drivers than those who get behind the wheel when they are drunk. These effects include slow mental capacity, being tired at intermittent times, cramps on your muscles, and an inability to focus or concentrate on tasks. Among the physical effects of sleep deprivation that are the worst is the inability for the body to metabolize glucose. This results in physical effects that are similar to aging and diabetes in its early stages. Being sleep deprived on a regular basis can decrease the stretchiness of your skin, which can lead to wrinkles. Your skin's pigment can also change if you don't get enough sleep. In addition, your eyesight can suffer, and you can get those dark circles under your eyes. Some people who have not gotten enough rest even suffer from color blindness.

A 1999 study[21] found that sleep deprivation resulted in reduced cortisol secretion the next day, driven by increased subsequent slow-wave sleep. Sleep deprivation was found to enhance activity on the Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (which controls reactions to stress and regulates body functions such as digestion, the immune system, mood, sex, or energy usage) while suppressing growth hormones. The results supported previous studies, which observed adrenal insufficiency in idiopathic hypersomnia.

 

Diabetes
In 2005, a study of over 1400 participants showed that participants who habitually slept few hours were more likely to have associations with Diabetes Type 2

Effects on the brain
Sleep deprivation can adversely affect brain function.[16] A 2000 study, by the UCSD School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs Healthcare System in San Diego, used also functional magnetic resonance imaging technology to monitor activity in the brains of sleep-deprived subjects performing simple verbal learning tasks.[17] The study showed that regions of the brain's prefrontal cortex displayed more activity in sleepier subjects. Depending on the task at hand, the brain would sometimes attempt to compensate for the adverse effects caused by lack of sleep.

Effects on growth
Loss of sleep may serve to decrease nocturnal IL-6 levels, with effects on the integrity of immune system functioning. Alternatively, given the association between sleep stages and IL-6 levels, depressed or aged populations who show increased amounts of REM sleep and a relative loss of slow wave sleep may have elevated nocturnal concentrations of IL-6 with implications for inflammatory disease risk. Source
Effects on the healing process
Without proper sleep, the body can not recovery and rejuvenate for the next day. Sleep deprivation is a stress induced complication but can also lead to additional stress upon the body. For individuals who suffer from injury, sleep deprivation can have an adverse affect on the healing and recovery process.source

Do you get into bed feeling tired, ready for sleep,and suddenly just wake up?.Check your surroundings, are there electrical outlets, phone or laptop chargers, 50-60hz magnetic fields, if so try turning them off.. Check your enviroment with one of these meters, you might be horrified to see the crazy magnetic fields your laying in. Standard meter High Sensitivity EMF meter

Attention
Impairment of ability

A 2000 study by the UCSD School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs Healthcare System in San Diego, used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technology to monitor activity in the brains of sleep-deprived subjects performing simple verbal learning tasks. The study showed that regions of the brain’s prefrontal cortex (PFC) displayed more activity in sleepier subjects. Depending on the task at hand, in some cases the brain attempts to compensate for the adverse effects caused by lack of sleep.
Obesity

Research by Warwick Medical School at the University of Warwick has found that sleep deprivation is associated with an almost a two-fold increased risk of being obese for both children and adults.Source

Aging

A University of California, San Diego, psychiatry study of more than one million adults found that people who live the longest self-report sleeping for six to seven hours each night.[19] Another study of sleep duration and mortality risk in women showed similar results.[20] Other studies show that "sleeping more than 7 to 8 hours per day has been consistently associated with increased mortality,"

The Gift of Sleep

CES reduces time to fall asleep, increases time spent in deepest sleep and, the amount of time in bed, spent asleep. It also reduces confusion and bewilderment and increases IQ in recovering addicts.

Studies discovered that while Cranial Electrotherapy does not always"put a person to sleep", it does accomplish some very therapeutic changes in the sleep patterns of people who complain of insomnia. The studies below show that whether measured by the patient's own ratings, psychiatrists ratings or by electroencephalograph or polygraph recordings before and after Cranial Electrotherapy treatments, the following effects of CES in insomnia can be expected:

1. Sleep onset latency is reduced. That is, once a person has retired for the evening, the amount of time it takes him to actually fall asleep is reduced from one to two hours or more to the more normal twenty minutes or less.

2. The number of awakenings during the night are reduced. That is, while most insomniacs awaken three or more times during the night and have difficulty falling asleep again, those treated with Cranial Electrotherapy typically awaken no more than once or twice following therapy, with most reporting no awakenings. Furthermore, after awakening, they return to sleep much more promptly than before

3. Cranial Electrotherapy treated patients spend more time in stage four sleep following CES treatments. That is, patients spend more time in the deepest, most restful stage of sleep than they did prior to Cranial Electrotherapy treatment. It should be noted that some patients who have deprived themselves of REM sleep - the stage during which dreaming occurs - by taking drugs or alcohol as a sleeping aid, sometimes spend the first two or three nights in unusually vivid dream states when first starting CES treatments. This is considered another indication of the therapeutic effectiveness of Cranial Electrotherapy in that persons are known to become increasingly disorganized mentally, some even to the point of psychotic-like symptoms, when they do not engage in the normal amount of dreaming.

4. Finally, it was discovered that many patients receiving Cranial Electrotherapy treatments report feeling more rested when they awaken in the morning following Cranial Electrotherapy treatments.


Treatment parameters: While some patients begin to respond after the second or third day of treatment, others do not have their best response with fewer than 24 days of treatments lasting from 15 minutes to 1 hour. The beneficial effects have been measured in some experimental groups for as long as two years. Some people with insomnia have a habitual pattern of responding to situational stress with an interruption in their sleep patterns. The best results are obtained when Cranial Electrotherapy is used each time unusual stressors occur in their life situations that would ordinarily cause poor sleep. The Cranial Electrotherapy device user is thereby trained over time to expect a good night's sleep no matter what stressful interruptions occurred in the normal flow of daily life.

Sleep-Mate Built in Sleep Programs

Just clip it on your Ear lobes sit back close your eyes and enjoy

 

Catnap
26 mins aprox
Takes you down into Delta holds you there for 10 mins then brings you back up
Sleep
20 Mins aprox
Takes you down to 5hz then lets your drop off naturaly
Insomnia
23 Mins aprox
Takes you way down to 0.05 hz very low delta your body will do the rest
Wake up
15 mins Aprox
Feeling Drowsey need to wake up, become more alert
 

Fully portable with Rechargable batteries included
High QualityEarclips
Instructions

The gift of Sleep

 

BT Pro With the sleepmate option

BT Pro Multi system

Full LED screen
Built in frequencies

0.5 Hz
1.5 Hz
5.0 Hz
7.83 Hz
10 Hz
100.00 Hz

Plus the Full BT6-BT11 Beck Protocol 1000.00 Hz + 111.00 Hz
Over 500 Natural Harmonic frequencies

Fully Rechargeable Batteries/Charger

Timer : 5 - 60 mins

Intensity Control

Very portable

Instructions

High Quality Ear clips

LCD Screen

BT Pro Master Unit

"Homeostasis can be defined as the tendency for intrinsic balance within a system. Application of a range of CES appears to enhance the Balance of the biological central nervous system. A change in one system within the individual will have correlative effects upon other systems. Improvements in mood, cognitive function, self image, shift of Focus , control to oneself, and sense of well being can be measured. When CES works, it enhances one's ability to handle or deal with situations that were previously beyond the range of one's control."

Option Bio-feedback

There is a relationship between Stress and the Electrical conductivity of the skin. This is known as Galvanic Skin Response or GSR.

Free Option allows one to measure GSR

Skin conducts electric current like a Resistor. The resistance of Skin can vary from 25 Kilo Ohms to 2 Mega Ohms depending on the Emotional state (This varies from person to person ).This variation is due to the changes in the permeability of the skin. In a normal fully relaxed person, skin resistance will be around 2 Mega Ohms. This is due to the low permeability of the skin. Skin offers high resistance and restricts the current flow. But if the same person is in stress, his skin resistance reduces to 25 Kilo Ohms or less due to leakage of water from the blood vessels and subsequent sweating. This increases the electrical conductivity of the skin. Thus the electrical conductivity of the skin and Stress are directly related

Bonus with BT Pro Unit

Sleepmate Option

What would you do to feel good and get a better night’s sleep???????
Difficulty falling or staying asleep is a common problem. About half of Americans report sleep difficulty at least occasionally, according to National Sleep Foundation surveys. These woes - called insomnia by doctors - have far-reaching effects: a negative impact on concentration, productivity and mood. Most of us don't know much about sleep, not even our own and to make it worst ---- sleep problems have a profound effect on our sleeping and waking life

Unlocking this Option gives you the full potential of the SleepMate

Unlock code plus you will be sent these:
Sleepmate Coil and Lead+
Sleepmate Driver

Catnap Takes you down into Delta holds you there for 10 mins then brings you back up
Sleep Takes you down to 5hz then lets your drop off naturally
Insomnia Takes you way down to 0.05 hz very low delta your body will do the rest .
Wake up! Feeling Drowsy need to wake up, become more alert?

Add Sleepmate option

 

 

 

Do you have the BTPro ?
Add sleepmate option

The terms of sale Please Read them before you order



Sleep Mate 3

NZ$299.95

Add to Cart:

    Approx USD$179.17
  • Model: slmate3


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