Sleep More, Weigh Less
If "Lose Weight" is on your list of 2007 New Year's Resolutions, keep reading...
To order Good Night: The Sleep Doctor's 4-Week Program for Better Sleep and Better Health (which talks in depth about the role of sleep in weight loss and hunger management), click here.
Can't Shed Those Pounds?
A lack of zzzzs can affect your ability to lose weight
(reprinted from SoundSleepSolutions.com)
Sleep loss may make you feel hungry, even if you are full, and increase fat storage.
To lose weight seems to be the number one resolution each new year. However, nearly 90% of these resolutions meet with either little or no success. Some people even gain weight instead. Most people never know there may be a very simple reason why: They don't sleep well.
Studies published in The Journal of the American Medical Association and The Lancet suggest that sleep loss may increase hunger and affect the body's metabolism, which may make it more difficult to maintain or lose weight. [I talk about this in depth in my book, Good Night.]
Sleep loss appears to do two things:
1. Makes you feel hungry even if you are full. Sleep loss has been shown to affect the secretion of cortisol, a hormone that regulates appetite. As a result, individuals who lose sleep may continue to feel hungry despite adequate food intake.
2. Increases fat storage. Sleep loss may interfere with the body's ability to metabolize carbohydrates, which leads to high levels of blood sugar. Excess blood sugar promotes the overproduction of insulin, which can lead to the storage of body fat and insulin resistance, a critical step into the development of diabetes.
Conversely, weight loss also impacts sleep:
An Australian study reported that obese individuals (a group of over 300 patients who received a surgical procedure to help weight loss) not only showed significant sleep problems, but also showed a reduction of these problems with weight loss:
1. Habitual Snoring (82%) reduced to 14%
2. Observed sleep apnea (33%) reduced to 2%
3. Abnormal daytime sleepiness (39%) reduced to 4%
4. Poor sleep quality (39%) reduced to 2%
Why would an overweight person tend to have sleep problems?
There appear to be several reasons why this may occur:
- Many people who are overweight have sleep apnea, a disorder in which breathing starts and stops during sleep, consequently causing numerous awakenings. This may occur hundreds of times a night, without your even knowing it. So you can imagine how sleepy you could feel the next day.
- Some who are overweight have low back pain, making laying comfortably in bed and getting a good night's sleep difficult.
- People who are depressed or otherwise worried about their weight may have insomnia, or the inability to fall asleep.
It is also important to realize that the quality of sleep (that is, getting the right amount of "deep sleep") is just as important as the quantity of sleep.
For example, decreased amounts of restorative deep or slow-wave sleep have been associated with significantly reduced levels of growth hormone, a protein that helps regulate the body's proportions of fat and muscle during adulthood.
Sleep Tips to Help You Shape Up
Specialists recommend that people who vow to lose weight should adjust their sleep habits as well as their eating habits. The following are useful tips to help shape up.
- Don't go to bed feeling hungry, but don't eat a big meal right before bedtime.
- Exercise regularly, but as a rule, not less than 3 to 4 hours prior to bedtime. Exercise is stimulating for many people.
- Avoid caffeine, nicotine, and alcohol in the late afternoon and evening.
- If you have trouble sleeping at night, don't nap during the day.
- Establish relaxing pre-sleep rituals, such as a warm bath or a few minutes of reading.
- Create a pleasant sleep environment. Make it as dark and quiet as possible.
If you can't sleep, don't stay in bed fretting. After 30 minutes, go to another room and involve yourself in a relaxing activity until you feel sleepy.
If you have trouble sleeping for more than a few weeks, or if sleep problems interfere with daily functioning, speak with your doctor.
By Michael Breus, PhD, ABSM
and Stuart J. Meyers, M.D.
Medically Updated: July, 2006
Published May 1, 2003
SOURCES: Sleep Disturbance and Obesity Arch Intern Med. 2001;161:102-106.
Copyright © 2003-2006, Sound Sleep, LLC.











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Posted by: shelly | October 22, 2008 at 03:43 AM
Hi,
This article got me thinking about the relationship between sleep and your weight. People who get 8 hours of sleep each night tend to weigh less than people who sleep less. Getting enough sleep encourages your body to produce more leptin hormones and less ghrelin hormones. Leptin is the fullness hormone and ghrelin is the hunger hormone. Getting enough sleep reduces your anxiety and depression which may reduce your emotional eating.
Posted by: appetite suppressant | April 15, 2009 at 11:09 PM
This article really explained to me what big thing sleep plays in our body metabolism. This coming from a medial doctor really makes me believe it because i thought my mom was joking when she told me that I have to sleep well to be 'good' in weight.
Posted by: medical doctor | April 23, 2009 at 03:12 AM
Sleeplessness or insomnia can also be very painful. And this is an interesting perspective of viewing sleep in regard to weight loss.
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