Drinking alcohol may help put you to sleep, but as the night wears on鈥攁nd the booze wears off鈥攜ou may find yourself tossing and turning. This may be especially true if you鈥檙e a woman, according to a new study.
Women who go to bed tipsy sleep much less soundly than men who have the same blood-alcohol content (BAC), the study found. Whereas alcohol had only a minor impact on men鈥檚 sleep, the female study participants slept more fitfully and for less time after a night of drinking than they did when they were sober.
The delayed sleep problems caused by alcohol are well-known to researchers (and anyone who鈥檚 had a few too many), but this is the first sizable study to show that the same level of intoxication affects women鈥檚 sleep more than men鈥檚. Although the researchers aren鈥檛 certain why these gender differences exist, it could be because women鈥檚 bodies clear alcohol from the bloodstream more quickly.
鈥淢ost of the early literature focused on men,鈥 says the lead author of the study, J. Todd Arnedt, PhD, director of the behavioral sleep medicine program at the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor. 鈥淏ut we predicted that sleep would be worse in women because women metabolize alcohol quite differently.鈥
In the study, which was funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and published online in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, Arnedt and his colleagues monitored the slumber of 93 twentysomething men and women after a night of drinking鈥攁nd a night of simulated drinking.
The study took place in a sleep lab. On one night, volunteers drank Wild Turkey bourbon or Absolut vodka mixed with caffeine-free Coke until their BAC reached .10鈥攁 level that makes most people visibly drunk. On another night, roughly a week apart, they drank a 鈥減lacebo鈥 beverage that had only a few drops of alcohol in each glass. (Few volunteers were fooled.)
The participants were sent to bed for eight hours after each session. As they slept, research technicians monitored their brain waves, eye movement, and other sleep markers. On waking, the volunteers were asked to rate how well they had slept.
According to the lab readings, the men slept just as soundly after drinking alcohol as they did when they were sober. The women, by contrast, slept nearly 20 minutes less and awoke more often and for longer periods when they had alcohol in their system.

