Stay healthy and happy throughout the holiday season Delmarva Daily Times, MD - Weight gain is not the only consequence that can occur from eating foods high in fat or sugar. They can also cause blood sugar fluctuations, which lead to ...
Too little sleep tied to increased cancer risk Reuters - Nov 17, 2008 By Will Dunham WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Regular exercise can reduce a woman's risk of cancer, but the benefits may slip away if she gets too little sleep, ...
If Your Child(ren) Are Obese? RichmondChic.com, Virginia - Nov 24, 2008 It is easy to blame others for your child?s weight, but this study shows that parents have to take responsibility for their child?s weight too. ...
Trip To Rose Bowl For Joe Pa Too Much, Too Soon After Surgery? Pittsburgh Channel.com, PA - Nov 24, 2008 Some doctors caution that could be too soon. Dr. Brett Smith, an orthopedic surgeon, said patients should restrict weight bearing and give the bone time to ...
Lincoln's Challenge Academy: For one cadet, a divine gift Urbana/Champaign News-Gazette, IL - Nov 30, 2008 It's 4 am in the dorm at Lincoln's Challenge Academy and while nearly all the cadets are sleeping in their bunks, 18-year-old Desmond Battles is clutching ...
Can?t sleep? Shut your busy mind Inquirer.net, Philippines - Nov 24, 2008 Not everyone who regularly exercises gets good sleep. Rouse said people who can?t sleep often have too many things taxing their mind. ...
In college Miller continues to run away with success VillageSoup Belfast, USA - These include a lot of core body strength, weight lifting, deep tissue massage, good nutrition, being on a regimented sleeping schedule and other things. ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: weight + sleep + effect Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)
Personal Health Sorting Out Coffee?s Contradictions New York Times, United States - Millions of sleep-deprived Americans depend on caffeine to help them make it through their day and drive safely. The drug improves alertness and reaction ...
Lose Weight Whilst You Sleep - Swiss Scientists discover 'Dieter's ... PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - Aug 4, 2008 There have been no adverse side effects recorded. 'It gives will-power to the weak, making losing weight easy,' says Dr Ciantar, research leader at the ...
Weight For It Glasgow Daily Record, UK - Sleep loss causes changes in hormone levels that may affect hunger, the scientists said. It also leads to fatigue, which may result in less physical ...
Sleep Tight: JetBlue Now Charging $7 for Pillows ABC News - Aug 4, 2008 Some airlines have already removed all the pillows and blankets from their flights to save weight. But JetBlue -- known best for its free live satellite TV ...JBLU
How to set yourself up for diet success Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY - "You breathe so much better, you sleep better. You have less fatigue and more energy. You take fewer medications and have fewer medical problems," Blackburn ...
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Effect of weight loss on upper airway collapsibility in obstructive sleep apnea. - AR Schwartz, AR Gold, N Schubert, A Stryzak, RA … - Am Rev Respir Dis, 1991 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Effect of weight loss on upper airway collapsibility in obstructive sleep apnea.
Schwartz AR, Gold AR, Schubert N, Stryzak A, Wise RA, Permutt S, Smith PL. ...
Disturbed sleep: effects of sociocultural factors and illness. - RJ Rona, L Li, MC Gulliford, S Chinn - Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1998 - pt.wkhealth.com ... were excluded because information on sex, weight, or height ... that the higher risk
of sleep disturbance in ... may correspond to a period effect, coinciding with ...
Longitudinal Study of Moderate Weight Change and Sleep-Disordered Breathing - PE Peppard, T Young, M Palta, J Dempsey, J Skatrud - JAMA, 2000 - Am Med Assoc ... quantify the effect of weight change on SDB. Most previous studies linking obesity
and SDB have used cross-sectional convenience samples of patients from sleep- ...
Increases in leptin levels, sympathetic drive, and weight gain in obstructive sleep apnea - BG Phillips, M Kato, K Narkiewicz, I Choe, VK … - American Journal of Physiology- Heart and Circulatory …, 2000 - Am Physiological Soc ... Recent weight gain in patients with newly diagnosed obstructive sleep apnea. ... Pinkney,
JH, Coppack SW, and Mohamed-Ali V. Effect of isoprenaline on plasma ...
Can sleeping more help you lose weight? At first, the idea seems counterintuitive. But research shows that sleep deprivation can cause hormonal and metabolic changes that can lead to weight gain. Plus, when you’re feeling sluggish, you’re more likely to crave empty calories like chips or cookies—and less likely to have the energy to hit the gym.
Below, Orfeu Buxton, PhD, an instructor of medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, and Jana Klauer, MD, a research fellow at the New York Obesity Research Center of St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital, discuss the complex relationship between sleep and body weight.
How can sleeping too little affect body weight?
JANA KLAUER, MD: When we sleep too little, we produce more cortisol, the stress hormone in the body. Cortisol, in turn, causes the release of insulin and higher insulin levels are associated with increased weight because insulin is a hormone that promotes fat storage.
ORFEU BUXTON: Another factor associated with sleep restriction that might lead to increase in weight is increased hunger. It seems as if the body responds to sleep restriction by craving more fuel. Leptin is a molecule secreted by fat cells and conveys a satiety signal that says, "There’s enough fuel on board." With sleep restriction, even when the level of activity and the amount of calories are constant, the body says, "I need more food." This is inappropriate and may lead to overeating and potentially to obesity in the long term.
What other effects does sleep restriction have on the body?
ORFEU BUXTON: From sleep restriction experiments it’s clear that, with just a week of sleep loss, sleeping only four hours a night, insulin levels are higher and the ability of blood sugar to be used is dramatically altered. And these changes developed in healthy young adults in just a week of sleep loss. The alterations of blood sugar metabolism are termed "impaired glucose tolerance." and this is one of the early stages on the way towards full-blown diabetes. Habitual sleep restriction could play a very important role in increasing risk for diabetes later in life, especially if maintained over many years and decades, much like a sedentary lifestyle or poor eating habits. It’s not something that catches up with you in a week or in two weeks, but it’s something that over decades can shorten your life.
How can sleeping too much affect body weight?
ORFEU BUXTON: It’s not clear that sleeping too much has anything to do with increasing body weight. There have been some studies that have associated very long sleep duration (like 10 hours or more) on a regular basis, with obesity or weight gain or even increased mortality. It’s not clear at all that it was the sleep that did that, or if sleep was a symptom of some unknown health problem.
How does sleep loss affect your food choices?
JANA KLAUER, MD: When the body’s rested, you think clearly and you don’t have reduced energy and you’re more apt, under those circumstances, to make wise nutritional choices and to select something that’s healthy for your body. When you’re sleep-deprived, you want to go for an empty calorie energy boost and usually those are carbohydrates that are very low in nutrients and very high in calories.
What is the connection between sleep and exercise?
JANA KLAUER, MD: You might be more tired and you won’t give your workout the intensity that you normally would or maybe you’ll skip your workout. If you’re going to be exercising, you need to rest. When someone switches their sleep pattern to one of increased deep sleep, they wake up renewed. They don’t put off going to the gym; they get out of bed, put on their gym clothes and go out the door and exercise. And exercise will help you to sleep deeper and really get into that deep slow-wave sleep. It is a cycle, and exercise will help them to sleep better that night, so I think each kind of helps the other.
Could poor sleep be another risk factor for obesity?
JANA KLAUER, MD: Sleep is just as important as nutrition and exercise in a healthy diet plan. It’s very important to give yourself adequate sleep. Americans sleep, during the workweek, an average of 6 hours and 54 minutes and, on the weekends, they add about 40 extra minutes per day. So we do go around a little sleep-deprived.
ORFEU BUXTON, MD: Poor sleep or restricted sleep can potentially be seen as a symptom of a stressful or unhealthy lifestyle. Adequate sleep is a sign of a balanced lifestyle along with diet and exercise. It’s been an important recognition that sufficient sleep is important for good health.