The recent rise in obesity may be partly due to the reduced amount
of time we spend asleep, according to new research from the University
of Bristol, UK.
Dr Shahrad Taheri from Bristol University, and colleagues in
the United States, examined the role of two key hormones that
are involved in regulating appetite – ghrelin and leptin.
Ghrelin increases feelings of hunger while leptin acts to suppress
appetite.
Individuals who spend less than 8 hours sleeping were shown to
have a greater likelihood of being heavier.
People who habitually slept for 5 hours were found to have 15%
more ghrelin than those who slept for 8 hours. They were also
found to have 15% less leptin. These hormonal changes may cause
increased feelings of hunger, leading to a foraging in the fridge
for food.
Dr Taheri, lead author of the study, said: “We found that
people who slept for shorter durations have reduced leptin and
elevated ghrelin. These differences are likely to increase appetite
and, in societies where food is readily available, this may contribute
to obesity. Individuals who spent less than 8 hours sleeping were
shown to have a greater likelihood of being heavier. Good sleep,
in combination with other lifestyle modifications may be important
in fighting obesity”.
This is the first large population-based study to show a significant
association between sleep duration and metabolic hormones. The
research examined over 1000 volunteers under “real life”
conditions.
Dr Taheri, Clinical Lecturer at Bristol University’s Henry
Wellcome Laboratories, and colleagues at Stanford University and
the University of Wisconsin studied volunteers from the Wisconsin
Sleep Cohort Study, a population-based study of sleep disorders.
The participants underwent continuous sleep monitoring, and reported
on their sleep habits through questionnaires and sleep diaries.
The results are published in the open-access medical journal Public
Library of Science Medicine (7 December, 2004).
Over the last 50 years we have reduced the amount of time we
spend asleep by up to two hours a night because of increasing
pressures on our time (work, school, family, television, computer
games and the internet). The research suggests that this lack
of sleep may be contributing to the obesity pandemic.
So the moral of this story is, if you are going to indulge yourself
excessively this Christmas, make sure you have a good long snooze
afterwards to compensate…