How Sleep Habits Can Affect Weight

Tufts University

About one in three adults in the United States report routinely not getting enough sleep. Sleep insufficiency is associated with increased risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, mental health problems, injuries, loss of productivity, and death. It also appears to be associated with increased risk for obesity, especially in children. Fortunately, sleep is a modifiable risk factor to improve health-one that you can often do something about.

The Sleep-Weight Connection

Scientists are still trying to determine the biologic mechanisms that may account for the relationship between sleep and weight. "It's easy to see how sleeping too much could lead to weight gain, since you can't be burning a lot of calories when you're asleep," says José M. Ordovás, PhD, senior scientist and leader of the Nutrition and Genomics Team at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA). "It's less obvious how sleeping too little could also cause one to gain weight."

Certainly, we have less energy to be physically active when we're tired, so we might burn less calories. Staying up late gives us more hours in the day to consume calories, and it's easy to fall into the trap of eating to get energy to stay awake when we're tired. While not all research agrees, there is evidence that people tend to consume more calories when their sleep is restricted, and sleep-restricted individuals may choose foods that are of poorer quality compared to non-sleep restricted individuals.

"People who have poorer sleep have been found to have higher levels of the hormone ghrelin and lower levels of the hormone leptin," says Ordovás. "Ghrelin is a hormone that induces hunger. Leptin is the opposite. It sends the signal that you've had enough and can stop eating." So, a lack of sufficient, restful sleep may cause you to be hungrier during the day.

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