A recent study published found that
people who sleep less tend to be fat, and experts said it's
time find if more sleep will fight obesity.
"We've put so much emphasis
on diet and exercise that we've failed to recognize the value
of good sleep," said Fred Turek, a physician at Northwestern
University.
"In fact society emphasizes
just the opposite," in work places where billed hours are
crucial and long work days are common, he added.
Monday's study from Eastern
Virginia Medical School in Norfolk covered 1,000 people and
found that total sleep time decreased as body mass index --
a measure of weight based on height -- increased.
Men slept an average of 27
minutes less than women and overweight and obese patients
slept less than patients with normal weights, it said. In
general the fatter subjects slept about 1.8 hours a week less
than those with normal weights.
"Americans experience insufficient
sleep and corpulent bodies. Clinicians are aware of the burden
of obesity on patients," the study said.
AN EXTRA 20 MINUTES
"Our findings suggest that
major extensions of sleep time may not be necessary, as an
extra 20 minutes of sleep per night seems to be associated
with a lower body mass index," it added.
"We caution that this study
does not establish a cause-and-effect relationship between
restricted sleep and obesity (but) investigations demonstrating
success in weight loss via extensions of sleep would help
greatly to establish such a relationship."
The study was published in
the Archives of Internal Medicine along with an editorial
by Turek and Northwestern colleague Joseph Bass commenting
on it and related research.
Turek said some studies have
shown sleep deprivation causes declines in an appetite suppressing
protein hormone called leptin, and increases in another hormone
that causes a craving for food. In addition neuropeptides
in the brain governing sleep and obesity appear to overlap,
he said.
"It is now critical to determine
the importance of lack of sufficient sleep during the early
formative years in putting our youth on a trajectory toward
obesity ... a trajectory that could be altered if sleep loss
is indeed playing a role in this epidemic," the editorial
said.
Obesity has been rising dramatically
in developed countries and reached epidemic levels in the
United States, it added, leading to a variety of health problems.
"In recent years, a new and
unexpected 'obesity villain' has emerged, first from laboratory
studies and now ... in population-based studies: insufficient
sleep," it said.
"However, while there is a
growing awareness among some sleep, metabolic, cardiovascular,
and diabetes researchers that insufficient sleep could be
leading to a cascade of disorders, few in the general medicine
profession or in the lay public have yet made the connection,"
it added.
Reference
Source 89
January 11, 2005