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Multi Omics Sleep Optimization

Sleep Optimisation

Medically reviewed by Prof. Dr. Tamer Fawzy, Consultant ENT Surgen

Recovery. Energy. Performance.

Because peak performance starts the night before. Sleep is not simply about duration—it is about quality, depth, and recovery. Many high-performing individuals achieve adequate sleep duration, yet remain fatigued, cognitively suboptimal, and under-recovered.

Why Sleep Matters for Performance

High-level professional roles require consistent attention, rapid decision-making, emotional resilience, and strategic thinking. These functions are strongly influenced by sleep architecture. Deep sleep supports physical recovery, immune regulation, hormonal balance, and metabolic stability. REM sleep contributes to memory processing, emotional regulation, creativity, and executive decision-making.
Chronic sleep disruption may lead to reduced productivity, impaired concentration, mood instability, and increased risk of cardiovascular and metabolic disease.

Why Use Wearable Technology

Performance wearables allow continuous monitoring of physiological signals such as heart rate variability (HRV), resting heart rate, respiratory rate, sleep duration, and estimated sleep stages. These metrics help us understand how the autonomic nervous system responds to work /training stress.

For example, reduced HRV may indicate accumulated fatigue or insufficient recovery, while an elevated resting heart rate during sleep may reflect illness, dehydration, psychological stress, or excessive training load. Decreased deep sleep can signal circadian disruption, travel fatigue, or suboptimal sleep habits.

Recovery and Readiness Metrics

Many wearable platforms provide composite scores such as recovery or readiness. These scores estimate how prepared the body for high-intensity effort. While not diagnostic, persistent low readiness trends may suggest sleep deprivation, overtraining, metabolic strain, or early illness.

Circadian Rhythm and Performance

Travel across time zones, late-night work / training, and irregular schedules can disrupt circadian rhythm. Such disruption may impair endurance capacity, hormonal regulation, glucose metabolism, and cognitive focus. Wearables help track sleep timing consistency and physiological adaptation to new schedules, enabling targeted strategies involving light exposure, meal timing, and structured sleep routines.

When Sleep Data Suggests a Medical Issue

Sleep data may reveal patterns that require medical evaluation. Warning signs include persistent daytime fatigue, highly fragmented sleep, loud snoring, witnessed breathing pauses, or failure to recover despite adequate sleep duration..

How Sleep Specialists Support Performance

A sleep physician can interpret wearable trends within the context of medical history, airway anatomy, training demands, and metabolic health. This allows development of individualized strategies to improve restorative sleep. Interventions may include optimizing sleep scheduling, improving breathing during sleep, addressing nasal or upper airway obstruction, coordinating recovery with training cycles, and managing stress physiology.

Ultimately, wearable technology provides valuable insights, but optimal work /athletic performance is achieved when data interpretation is combined with expert clinical guidance. High-quality restorative sleep remains one of the most powerful and under-recognized performance enhancers in modern sports medicine.

Why High Performers Still Sleep Poorly

Many high-performing professionals and athletes sleep for what appears to be an adequate number of hours, yet still wake feeling unrefreshed and fatigued.

In many cases, this is driven by reduced deep sleep and REM sleep, rather than insufficient sleep duration.

This is often linked to snoring, autonomic imbalance, and subtle physiological dysfunction—not obstructive sleep apnea

Comprehensive Sleep Assessment

A sleep program begins with a detailed evaluation that includes sleep history, work demands, travel schedules, stress exposure, exercise patterns, and sleep environment optimization.

Wearable sleep data from devices such as WHOOP or Oura Ring may be reviewed to assess sleep consistency, recovery trends, heart rate variability, and estimated sleep stages.

Upper airway examination is performed to evaluate nasal airflow, tonsillar size, tongue position, and risk of sleep-disordered breathing. When indicated, formal sleep testing may be recommended.

In selected individuals, metabolic and hormonal assessment may help identify contributing factors such as weight regulation issues, glucose imbalance, or chronic stress physiology.

Who This Programme Is For ?

  • Experience snoring and disrupted sleep
  • Wake unrefreshed despite adequate sleep duration
  • Struggle with fatigue, low energy, or poor recovery
  • Feel cognitively slower or less focused during the day
  • Do not have diagnosed sleep apnea
  • Individuals who appear healthy, yet feel physiologically suboptimal

Precision Approach

A Precision Approach to Sleep Optimisation
Traditional sleep advice often focuses on general strategies. While helpful, these approaches rarely address the root biological causes of poor sleep quality and recovery.

Our approach combines:

Wearable Sleep Tracking

Continuous, objective physiological data

Multi-Omics Testing

Identification of underlying biological drivers

VO₂ Max Assessment

Evaluation of energy systems and recovery capacity

WEARABLES

What We Measure:

  • Total sleep time
  • Deep sleep and REM sleep
  • Sleep fragmentation
  • Heart rate variability (HRV)
  • Resting heart rate
  • Recovery trends

Why It Matters?

  • Identify deficits in restorative sleep
  • Detect patterns linked to snoring and disrupted breathing
  • Track recovery and physiological stress
  • Monitor progress over time

VO₂ Max and Physiological Recovery

VO₂ max is a key indicator of cardiorespiratory fitness, mitochondrial capacity, and recovery efficiency.

Higher VO₂ max is associated with improved sleep efficiency, increased deep sleep, and better autonomic balance.

Lower VO₂ max is often linked to fatigue, poor recovery, and fragmented sleep.

What We Measure ?

  • Maximal oxygen uptake (VO₂ max)
  • Aerobic and anaerobic thresholds
  • Heart rate zones
  • Ventilatory efficiency
  • Recovery kinetics

VO₂ max is one of the strongest real-world indicators of mitochondrial efficiency and recovery capacity.

Multi-Omics (1)

  • Multi-Omics Testing for Sleep and Fatigue
  • While wearables show what is happening, multi-omics explains why.
  • Stress and Circadian Rhythm
  • Cortisol rhythm
  • DHEA-S
  • Melatonin-related pathways
  • Disruptions here impair sleep onset and reduce deep sleep.
  • Metabolic and Energy Function
  • Glucose and insulin
  • HbA1c
  • Lipid profile
  • Markers of mitochondrial function and cellular energy metabolism
  • Metabolic imbalance reduces sleep depth and increases fatigue.

Multi-Omics (2)

  • Hormonal and Thyroid Balance
  • TSH, free T3, free T4
  • Testosterone and estradiol
  • SHBG, IGF-1
  • Hormonal imbalance affects sleep quality, recovery, and energy.
  • Inflammation and Oxidative Stress
  • High-sensitivity CRP
  • Ferritin
  • Homocysteine
  • Inflammation fragments sleep and impairs recovery.
  • Micronutrients and Nervous System Support
  • Magnesium
  • Vitamin B12 and folate
  • Vitamin D
  • Iron status
  • Zinc and copper
  • Deficiencies directly affect sleep quality and nervous system balance.
  • Genetic and Methylation Factors
  • Circadian rhythm genetics
  • Stress response pathways
  • Methylation efficiency
  • These influence sleep patterns and recovery capacity.

Mitochondria

  • Cellular Energy and Mitochondrial Function.
  • Mitochondria are responsible for cellular energy production (ATP).
  • While they are not measured directly in routine testing, their function can be assessed through validated proxy markers.

We evaluate:

  • Lactate (resting and post-exercise)
  • Lactate-to-pyruvate dynamics (when indicated)
  • VO₂ max (functional mitochondrial capacity)
  • Oxidative stress markers
  • Key nutrient cofactors (CoQ10, B vitamins, magnesium)
  • These reflect the efficiency of aerobic energy production and overall recovery capacity.
  • Impaired mitochondrial function often presents as fatigue, poor recovery, and reduced sleep depth—despite normal routine testing.

Personalised Sleep Optimisation Protocols

All data is integrated into a personalised strategy, which may include:

  • Lifestyle and circadian adjustments
  • Nutrition and targeted supplementation
  • Aerobic conditioning and VO₂ max optimisation
  • Recovery and stress regulation strategies
  • Snoring-focused interventions

Continuous Optimisation

  • Continuous Monitoring and Optimisation.
  • Sleep is dynamic.

We continuously:

  • Track wearable data
  • Adjust protocols based on response
  • Reassess biomarkers when necessary
  • This ensures sustained and measurable improvement.

Outcomes

  • Improved deep sleep and REM sleep
  • Better recovery and resilience
  • Higher daytime energy
  • Enhanced cognitive performance
  • Consistent physical performance

Optimise Your Sleep.
Optimise Your Performance.
Start with a comprehensive sleep performance assessment.

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