Sleep 9 or more hours, weigh less. Sleep 7, gain weight EDIT
Interesting study. Notice also that the author of this article has
sleep apnea, which I have also. I was prescribed a CPAP device about 18
months ago. My doctor said that I would lose 10 pounds in the first 30
days of use and while that didn't happen (I did lose 5), I now experience a much
more restful and longer periods of sleep. The most important thing that
happened for me is the I spent two different nights in a sleep clinic.
First time it was found that I actually stopped breathing from sleep apnea
multiple times per night. This is why sleep apnea can and does kill
you. Second night I was given a CPAP device and those who monitored my
sleep (through one way glass) kept adjusting the device to the "ideal"
setting for my condition which determined the settings on my own device when I
bought one.
http://news.yahoo.com/longer-sleep-might-trump-genetic-influences-high-weight...
Longer Sleep Might Trump Genetic Influences on High Weight
Yahoo!
Contributor Network – 3
hrs ago
COMMENTARY
| After a number of studies hinting at a link between sleep
deprivation and weight gain, researchers have discovered the impact
between sleep and
genetics and the resulting effect on how much a person weighs. Sleeping longer,
they believe, could suppress genetic
influences on high body
weight.
University
of Washington Medicine Sleep Center researchers have reported the results
of a federally funded study in the journal Sleep. They evaluated the
relationship between length of sleep and metabolism.
The team studied 604 identical twins to
discover how sleep duration might affect genetic and environmental influences on
body mass. Subjects' average age was 36.6 years. Nearly two-thirds were female.
Both sleep patterns
and body mass index (BMI) are inherited features.
Subjects slept an average of 7.2 hours
per night. Those who slept longer were slimmer than those who slept less.
Subjects who got less than seven hours of sleep had an elevated genetic risk of
a higher BMI than those who got more sleep.
Genetic factors were the culprit for more
than a third of the weight variations in individuals who slept more than nine
hours a night. With less than seven hours of shut-eye, they accounted for 70
percent of weight variations. The number dropped to 60 percent for those who
slept seven to nine hours.
Scientists have long held that sleep
deprivation can increase an individual's girth and cast a negative impact on
health. One of the difficulties in figuring out the exact relationship is that
people have significantly different individual needs as far as how much sleep is
enough. A number often considered average is 7.5 hours per night. The Washington
state study suggests that merely sleeping longer might suppress genetic
influences on weight.
This could be good news for individuals like me who have struggled for years
to keep off recently shed weight. I have a genetic propensity to being
overweight and another to problems sleeping soundly.
On a typical night, I went to bed around
11 p.m. and awoke dozens of times. Sometimes the culprit was obstructive
sleep apnea. Just as often, it was the cats we rescued, playing on the
bed. After losing 50 pounds, I grimaced as the scale climbed five pounds within
three weeks. It read four pounds more two weeks later.
Then I went on a trip and managed to slip beneath the hotel sheets by 10 p.m.
each night. I slept until 7 a.m. instead of 5 a.m., when I normally fed the
rescue cats. Back at home, after at least a dozen restaurant meals, I actually
weighed less than before the trip. These days, I'm in bed two hours more each
night in the hope that longer sleep will help suppress those genetic influences
on my body weight.
Vonda
J. Sines has published thousands of health and medical print and online
articles. She has a special interest in sleep
disorders.