Here's another study suggesting that there is a connection between inadequate sleep and weight gain. It has some surprises:
Go to sleep and lose some weight. I guess you could call it the Garfield Plan for weight loss."When we analyzed our data by splitting our subjects into 'short sleepers' and 'long sleepers,' we found that short sleepers tended to have a higher BMI, 28.3 kg/m2, compared to long sleepers, who had an average BMI of 24.5. Short sleepers also had lower sleep efficiency, experienced as greater difficulty getting to sleep and staying asleep," said lead investigator Arn Eliasson, M.D.
Surprisingly, overweight individuals tended to be more active than their normal weight counterparts, taking significantly more steps than normal weight individuals: 14,000 compared to 11,300, a nearly 25 percent difference, and expending nearly 1,000 more calories a day—3,064 versus 2,080.
However, those additional energy expenditures did not manifest in reduced weight.
1 comment:
yeah that's intersting one would think going off those statistics that it would be the other way around.. fascinating stuff... great post
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