Zzzzzzz... |
The study, involving 240 Cleveland area teens ages 16 to 19, showed that teens who slept less than eight hours per weeknight averaged a consumption of 2.2% more calories from fats and 3% fewer calories from carbohydrates than teens who slept eight hours per weeknight more. What's more astonishing is that for each hour added to their sleep, the odds of teens consuming a high number of calories from snacks decreased by an average of 21%!
Aside from snacking, sleeplessness can cause weight gain in other ways as well. Studies have shown that getting less sleep can change one's metabolic rate. This, in turn, can affect the production of two appetite regulating hormones called leptin and ghrelin.
While we've always focused on diet and exercise, it does make me wonder -- could sleep be the missing link in the fight against obesity?
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By: Bambi Blue
Bambi Blue is a freelance writer, editor, and codemonkey living in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. She moonlights as a jazz musician, a social butterfly, and most apparently a weisenheimer. Loves to cook, hates to clean, and can easily be found on Twitter.
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