Could more sleep really be the
secret to effective weight loss? It seems too good to be true, and yet
convincing research has shown that just one more hour of sleep a night could
help you shed those extra kilos.
In fact, neuro-scientist Karine
Spiegelof France's INSERM, a public organisation dedicated to biological,
medical and public health research, claimed that there are more than 30 surveys
which were carried out on worldwide population samples to back this theory up. "More
sleep could be the ideal way of stabilising weight or slimming," she said,
and added that, although poor eating habits and a lack of exercise contribute
to the global rise in obesity, there is a growing consensus that a lack of
sleep also plays a pivotal role.
Sleepless nights up obesity risk
"Around 30 surveys conducted on wide population
samples in seven countries have underlined a link between lack of sleep and
excess weight or obesity in both children and adults," Spiegel said. One
of the first studies conducted in this field, focused primarily on the problem
in children and teenagers, and was carried out in France in 1992.
According to Spiegel, the
increase in obesity in the US in the second half of the 20th century
corresponded with a mounting decrease in sleep. She put this down to two key
hormones produced at night, which help regulate appetite - grehlin and leptin -
as the culprits.
Less sleep makes you hungry
"Grehlin makes people hungry, slows metabolism
and decreases the body's ability to burn body fat, and leptin, a protein
hormone produced by fatty tissue, regulates fat storage. "We have shown
that less sleep, meaning less than four hours a night, caused an 18 percent
loss of appetite-cutting leptin and a 28 percent increase of appetite-causing
grehlin," she said.
Spiegel stated that these
hormonal changes made people hungry for foods heavy in fats and sugars such as
chips, biscuits, cakes and peanuts.
Shockingly, the sleep loss caused
a 23 - 24 percent increase in hunger which translated into an extra 350 to 500
kilocalories a day, which Spiegel pointed out "for a young sedentary adult
of normal weight could lead to a major amount of added weight." However,
at this stage it was still unclear whether several years of sleep deprivation
could cause lasting harm to the body's ability to restore a balance between the
two hormones.
Too much sleep is also bad
In another study, lead by Dr Angelo Tremblay, of
Laval University in Quebec City it was found that while too little sleep (less
than seven hours) led to weight gain, too much sleep (more than nine hours)
also led to weight gain.
In their study, the researchers
attempted to gain an understanding of the sleep duration-weight gain
relationship. They followed 276 men and women for six years and noted that
during that time, people who averaged five to six hours sleep a night gained
1.98 kg more than those who slept seven to eight hours. Conversely, those who
slept for nine to 10 hours gained 1.58 kg more than the average-length
sleepers.
The study also showed that both
short and long sleepers exhibited greater gains in fat mass and waist
circumference than average-length sleepers, and were significantly more likely to
gain five kg or more. They also were at increased risk of becoming obese.
Tremblay's suggests that too much
or too little sleep disrupts appetite control by causing a reduction in leptin.
At the same time increasing secretions of grehlin echoes Spiegel's conclusion
that too little sleep can make you hungry.
Sleepless childhood has
repercussions
But in a second
study conducted this year in the US it was found that children who did not get
enough shut-eye also faced a greater risk of becoming obese than those kids who
got a good night's sleep. In this case the researchers, from the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health carried out an analysis of epidemiological
studies which showed that each extra hour of sleep can cut a child's risk of
becoming overweight or obese by up to a whopping nine percent.
On the other hand, the studies
showed that children who had the least sleep had a shocking 92 percent higher
chance of being overweight or obese than children who slept enough. "Our
analysis shows a clear association between sleep duration and the risk for
overweight or obesity in children. The risk declined with more sleep,"
said Youfa Wang, a senior author of the study, published in the journal
Obesity.
"Desirable sleep behaviour
may be an important low cost means for preventing childhood obesity and should
be considered in future intervention studies," Wang added.
How much is too much or too
little?
So how much sleep should your
children be getting in order for them to grow up into healthy adults with
normal weight?
After researchers reviewed 17
published studies on sleep duration and childhood obesity, they found that most
research recommends that children under five years old sleep 11 hours or more a
day, while children aged between five and 10 years old should get 10 or more
hours of sleep with children older than 10 sleeping a recommended minimum of
nine hours. With regard to adult sleep patterns, the US National Sleep
Foundation found that more than 70 percent of adults over the age of 18 get
fewer than eight hours of sleep a night on weekdays - and 40 percent get fewer
than seven hours.
Among older adults - those
between 55 and 84 - 13 percent sleep less than six hours a night during the
week, while 11 percent have a similar sleep pattern on weekends. So how much is
too little? Researchers concur that the battle of the bulge may ultimately best
be waged beneath the sheets for at least seven to eight hours a night.
HEALTH24
HEALTH24
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