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Obesity linked to too little
sleep, again
New York -
The amount of time people spend sleeping may affect their
weight, study results suggest.
The study looked at people living in
rural areas. Previous studies conducted in urban and suburban areas
have had similar results, which suggests that sleep loss may play a
role in the increasing rates of obesity in the US.
Researchers have proposed that
shorter sleep duration may affect levels of two weight-control
hormones: reduced levels of leptin, a hormone associated with satiety,
and increased levels of ghrelin, associated with hunger.
Dr. Neal D. Kohatsu, an
epidemiologist at the California Department of Health Services in
Sacramento, and his associates were interested in studying rural
populations because obesity rates are higher and lifestyle patterns of
nutrition, physical activity, work hours, and sleep differ from those
in more populous areas.
Rural populations also have a higher
prevalence of suicide and a greater propensity toward other risky
health behaviors.
According to the researchers' report
in the Archives of internal Medicine, theirs is the first study
evaluating the relationship between sleep duration and body mass index
(BMI) in rural settings. BMI reflects weight in relation to height,
with 20-25 classified as normal, 25-30 as overweight, and over 30 as
obese.
The team analyzed data collected in
an agricultural county in southeastern Iowa, from a survey of a random
sample of 990 employed adults. The subjects were asked about sleep
duration, physical activity associated with employment, symptoms of
depression, alcohol consumption, snoring, and other demographic
information. Height and weight were measured during the same visit.
There was a straight-line
relationship between a higher BMI and lesser amount of sleep. The
average BMI ranged from 30.24 among individuals sleeping less than 6
hours per night, to 28.25 for those who slept more than 9 hours at a
time.
Kohatsu's
group speculates that "modest but sustained changes in sleep duration
could have a clinically significant effect on weight." They
acknowledge, however, that the study doesn't prove that reduced sleep
causes obesity. -- Reuters Limited
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