Adequate sleep helps you lose weight
Main Category: Sleep / Sleep Disorders / InsomniaArticle Date: 11 Jan 2004 - 0:00 PDT
'Adequate sleep helps you lose weight'
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Do you need to lose weight? Then, turn off the television or computer an hour earlier and go to bed. We're sleeping too little, experts warn.
Too much sitting instead of being active is clearly part of why overweight is now common.
But studies suggest that a lack of sleep may make weight loss and weight control more of a challenge by altering our metabolism, as well as our eating and activity patterns.
Some research has directly tested the idea that sleep deprivation leads to weight problems. For instance, in a Japanese study of six-and seven-year olds, children who slept nine to ten hours a night were compared to those who only slept eight to nine hours.
The latter group was almost twice as likely to be overweight. Children sleeping less than eight hours a night were almost three times as likely to be overweight.
Changes in hormone levels have been linked to sleep deprivation in several studies. One hormone, cortisol, regulates metabolism of sugar, protein, fat, minerals and water. Physical or emotional stress raises cortisol levels. Lack of sleep may also raise levels at certain times of the day.
Second, higher levels of insulin, a condition known as insulin resistance, have also been linked to a shortage of sleep in several studies. Excess cortisol could be the link. Since insulin not only controls blood sugar, but also promotes fat storage, extra insulin makes weight loss more difficult.
Sleep affects behavior (UK - Behaviour. USA - Behavior)
Further research needs to validate the hormonal changes observed. But even without any hormonal impact, sleep deprivation can promote weight gain by affecting our behavior.
When people low on sleep find their energy dropping throughout the day, many turn to food for a pickup. The short-term rise in blood sugar gives a more energetic feeling, but often the extra calories are not needed by the body and must be stored as body fat.
Furthermore, the most appealing foods when we feel low on energy are often sweets or refined carbohydrates with low nutrient density. If sleep deprivation causes insulin resistance, overconsuming these types of carbohydrates may be especially problematic.
Not only is it easy to take in excess calories when sleep deprived. For many people, calorie burning decreases. If your extra waking hours are spent in sedentary activities at a desk or computer or in front of the TV, you're not burning many more calories than when asleep.
And when sleep deprived, people are often too tired to exercise. Or if they do manage to exercise, they work out less intensely than usual. For example, a rested person may walk two miles in a half-hour, while someone more fatigued may go much less. The tired person would burn fewer calories, despite walking just as long.
Sleep experts recommend at least eight hours of sleep a night for most adults. Yet Americans average just under seven hours during the workweek, according to the National Sleep Foundation. In fact, a third of adults reportedly sleep no more than six-and-a-half hours nightly.
Shutting off the TV an hour earlier means an hour less munching time. It could also shift your metabolism to make weight control easier. It could even leave you with more energy to exercise. Definitely, these are propositions to sleep on.
Visit our sleep / sleep disorders / insomnia section for the latest news on this subject.
MLA
26 May. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/5276.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/5276.php.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
MoreSleepNow
posted by Shelley on 22 Sep 2011 at 4:54 pmRecently, I kept getting the thought to go to bed earlier. I knew about the 'early to bed, early to rise' information but had always viewed it in part as restricting. I really wanted to do some emotional healing and was also tired of having to wake up very early in the morning for this or that (after about six and a half hours sleep). I decided to test out how I would feel the next day after an 8 and a half hour sleep. I couldn't believe it. I had more energy, my attitude was more positive, I was more particular about what I ate, I was alot less sensitive when it came to getting up early and actually was keen to start the day. I am totally sold now and it's only been two nights since I started this experiment. Last night I slept for about 9 hours. I feel that my time management skills have improved, too. I'm getting more organised, even in the little things. Before, I always felt deprived of sleep when I woke up but I wasn't being disciplined enough to change my habit of staying up 'til midnight. It was like I was living haphazardly, just leaving open the time I'd go to bed. I didn't want that restriction telling me of when I should go to sleep but I would always pay for it the next day by feeling deprived, sensitive and not happy at all at the fact that I had to get up so early. Now, I don't want to get anything less than 9 hours of sleep a night - even on the weekends. I'm 48 but now I feel like I have the energy of myself twenty years ago, and I didn't even take a pill. I've been comparing it to recharging a mobile phone. How can one expect to live a full day in different ways, by working on a partially recharged phone. I feel like I'm working on a fully recharged mobile now. I'm actually happier also. I am usually a positive person but not always that happy. Now I'm actually happier throughout the day which is even surprising me. I put it all down to simply getting more sleep. It's more important than most people realise or understand. This is one of those hidden treasures of knowledge.
I hope it works for me!
posted by Alex on 7 Nov 2010 at 6:22 pmI am under 18 but think I should loose around 25 lbs and I am a open-minded individual and will try.....
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