Good Sleep: The 'Lazy' Person's Way to Slim Down

by Dr. Mercola in Diabetes Posted on 10/20/2010 12:00 AM

If you're trying your best to eat right and exercise, it might be worth it to make sure you get the proper amount of sleep each night, according to a new study that suggests lack of sleep can throw off a diet.

According to CNN Health, research from the University of Chicago showed that dieters who slept for 8.5 hours lost 55 percent more body fat than dieters who slept 5.5 hours

"The dieters who slept less reported feeling hungrier throughout the course of the study," CNN said, even though "they ate the same diet, consumed multivitamins and performed the same type of work or leisure activities."

The study authors concluded that "Lack of sufficient sleep may compromise the efficacy of typical dietary interventions for weight loss and related metabolic risk reduction," CNN said. The study was released October 4 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

Dr. Mercola's Comments:

Good sleep is a cornerstone of good health, yet is probably, by and large, the most ignored factor.

According to the 2010 "Sleep in America Poll" by The National Sleep Foundation, only about 40 percent of respondents reported getting a good night's sleep every night, or almost every night, of the week.

There are many likely reasons for this. But part of the problem may be that many have bought into the fallacy that you can safely make do with less than eight hours of sleep a day. Modern society has more or less brainwashed us into thinking that sleeping is for wimps, or a sign of lazy luxury that most cannot afford.

This, as it turns out, is not true, and studies have linked poor or insufficient sleep with a wide range of health problems -- including weight gain and obesity.

This latest study again confirms that if you do not take your sleep needs seriously, you could be unknowingly sabotaging your weight, not to mention your overall health.

Sleep Less, Weigh More

In this latest study, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, dieters who slept for 8.5 hours lost 55 percent more body fat than dieters who only got 5.5 hours of shut-eye.

They also reported feeling less hungry throughout each day compared with those who slept less.

These results were echoed in another recent study published earlier this year, in which subjects who slept less than six hours per night had a 32 percent gain in visceral fat, compared to a 13 percent gain among those who slept six or seven hours per night, and a 22 percent increase among men and women who got at least eight hours of sleep each night. This is the type of fat linked to heart disease, type 2 diabetes, strokes and other chronic diseases.

But why would lack of sleep lead to increased weight?

It is believed that insufficient amounts of sleep affect your hunger-regulating hormones, leptin and ghrelin. This and other studies have shown that when you are sleep deprived, your body decreases production of leptin (whose job it is to tell your brain when you're full and should stop eating), while at the same time increasing levels of ghrelin, a hormone that triggers hunger.

Lack of sleep also appears to affect glucose and fat utilization in your body, as well as energy metabolism – all of which can lead to a decreased ability to lose weight.

Although none of the studies mentioned in this article can prove that a lack of sleep directly causes fat gain, they all support the proposed link between sleep duration -- particularly a lack of sleep – and weight gain, as well as an increased risk of diabetes and heart disease.

Your Hormones Depend on Your Body Clock to Set the Pace...

It's important to realize just how vital afunction your internal body clock serves, because in many ways it helps regulate your overall health.

The physiological functions of virtually all organisms are governed by 24-hour circadian rhythms. Your circadian clock is an essential time-tracking system, which your body uses to anticipate environmental changes and adapt to the appropriate time of day.

When operating normally, this 'internal clock' is what wakes your body in the morning and makes you get sleepy once darkness falls.

However, if you deprive yourself of sleep, or eat meals at odd hours (times at which your internal clock expects you to be sleeping), you send conflicting signals to your body that can confuse and unbalance this internal system.

In one study, researchers found that people whogot four hours of sleep a nightfor just two nights in a row experienced:

  • 18 percent reduction in leptin

  • 28 percent increase in ghrelin

As described earlier, these hormonal alterations basically instruct your body to "be hungry," and "store fat."

In addition, previous researchhas also shown that subjects tend to crave more sweet and starchy foods opposed to vegetables and dairy products when getting less than six hours of sleep.

One possible explanation for this is that your brain is fueled by glucose (blood sugar); therefore, when you're sleep deprived, your brain searches for carbohydrates.

Regardless of the exact mechanisms, it's clear that sleep deprivation can push your body into a pre-diabetic state and make you feel hungry, even if you've already eaten – both of which can lead to weight problems.

Other Health Risks Linked to Poor or Insufficient Sleep

In addition to impaired weight control, poor sleep is associated with a number of other potentially serious health risks.

For example, interrupted or impaired sleep can:

  • Seriously impair your memory; even a single night of poor sleep—meaning sleeping only 4 to 6 hours—can impact your ability to think clearly the next day

  • Impair your performance on physical or mental tasks, and decrease your problem solving ability

  • Increase your risk of cardiovascular disease – One recent study found that sleeping fewer than five hours a day more than doubles your risk of being diagnosed with angina, coronary heart disease, heart attack or stroke. But sleeping more than seven hours also increased the risk of cardiovascular disease; more than nine hours of sleep resulted in a 50 percent increase in risk. Although a direct causative relationship between certain amounts of sleep and cardiovascular disease has yet to be found, researchers believe it is related to your endocrine and metabolic functions. In addition, sleep deprivation can impair your glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, and can raise your blood pressure -- all of which are associated with hardening of your arteries.

  • Increase your risk of cancerand accelerate tumor growth by altering the balance of hormones in your body. (Tumors grow two to three times faster in laboratory animals with severe sleep dysfunctions). One explanation for this is related to your production of melatonin, which is both a hormone and an antioxidant. When your circadian rhythms are disrupted, your body produces less melatonin, which reduces your body's ability to fight cancer since melatonin helps suppress free radicals that can lead to cancer. This is also why tumors grow faster when you sleep poorly.

  • Increase your risk of dying from any cause – According to one study, people with chronic insomnia have a three times greater risk of dying from any cause.

So, What's the Ideal Amount of Sleep?

Interestingly, excessive sleeping is not the answer to any of these problems becausesleeping more than nine hours has also been linked to a number of health issues, including weight gain, back pain, headaches, depression and heart disease.

So, what is the ideal amount of sleep?

It appears the Goldilocks' zone can be found somewhere between six to eight hours per night for most adults.

Keep in mind that your age and activity level will influence your sleep needs to some extent. Children and teens, for instance, need more sleep than adults.

However, your sleep needs are individual to you. You may require more or less sleep than someone of the same age, gender and activity level. Part of the reason for the difference has to do with what theNational Sleep Foundation (NSF)calls your basal sleep need and your sleep debt:

  • Basal Sleep Need: The amount of sleep you need on a regular basis for optimal performance

  • Sleep Debt: The accumulated sleep lost due to poor sleep habits, sickness, environmental factors and other causes

Studies suggest that healthy adults have a basal sleep need of seven to eight hours each night, corresponding nicely with all the research findings discussed above.

Your best bet?

Listen to your body!

If you still feel tired and fuzzy headed when the alarm goes off, you probably aren't getting sufficient sleep.

Can't Sleep? Try Something New...

If you have trouble sleeping, take advantage of some of the many practical solutions I've outlined in my 33 Secrets to a Good Night's Sleep, which include:

  • Avoid before-bed snacks, particularly grains and sugars. This will raise blood sugar and inhibit sleep. Later, when blood sugar drops too low (hypoglycemia), you might wake up and not be able to fall back asleep.

  • Sleep in complete darkness or as close as possible. If there is even the tiniest bit of light in your room it can disrupt your circadian rhythm and your pineal gland's production of melatonin and serotonin.

  • No TV right before bed. Even better, get the TV out of the bedroom or even out of the house, completely. It is too stimulating to your brain and it will take longer to fall asleep.

  • Wear socks to bed. Due to the fact that they have the poorest circulation, your feet often feel cold before the rest of your body. A study has shown that wearing socks reduces night wakings

  • Get to bed as early as possible. Our systems, particularly our adrenals, do a majority of their recharging or recovering during the hours of 11PM and 1AM.

  • Keep the temperature in the bedroom no higher than 70 degrees F. Many people keep their homes and particularly the upstairs bedrooms too hot.

  • Eat a high-protein snack several hours before bed. This can provide the L-tryptophan need to produce melatonin and serotonin.

In addition, you can use Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT). It effectively addresses emotional reasons for insomnia. See Using EFT for Insomnia.

BECOME A HEALER

Learn the art and science of Naturopathic Herbalism to become the healer of your home and your community, and build a profitable online health coaching business.

PODCAST INTERVIEWS

Unlock Your Potential as a Holistic Healer

02/01/2022

Mayim Vega, Naturopathic Herbalist and Holistic Life Coach, started Arukah.com, the Holistic Life Academy in 2009 to help people attain holistic health and healing through The Arukah Method. In 2021, Arukah.com began offering the Holistic Healer certification program to train people in nutrition, herbalism, naturopathy, and health & life coaching. Her goal is to create an army of much-needed holistic healers that will pave the way to the future of healthcare. As the inventor & visionary Thomas Edison once said, “The doctor of the future will give no medicine but will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, in diet and in the cause and prevention of disease.”

She was formerly a Computer Scientist/Engineer at the NASA Ames Research Center before starting her own family. She saw that the modern medical system was broken and took her family's health into her own hands by studying the top healers of our day. She believes the words of Hippocrates, the “Father of Medicine,” when he said, “The greatest medicine of all is teaching people how not to need it...Everyone has a doctor in him or her; we just have to help it in its work.”

Dr. Gilsa Zorrilla, M.D.

"There are so many positive things I could say about Mayim Vega. She possesses extensive knowledge of health issues. My family and I never hesitate to contact her immediately whenever we have any questions. I’d recommend her

100% any day!"

Rivkah Jaton Maddox

"Mayim has helped me tremendously over the last 3 years in my journey toward healing. There have been

multiple times that I have inquired and received

invaluable wisdom and knowledge from her."

Dr. Ark Pizarro, M.D.

"She has helped us on multiple occasions with life lessons,

health counseling and business insights that you know are coming from a person of great knowledge and wisdom. If you have the pleasure of getting to know her I'm sure you will

agree."

Reviews & Testimonials from Our Students

I've had the pleasure of knowing and working with Mayim Coralyn Vega of Arukah.com over the past 5 years. In that time it has been an honor to know a person of such high integrity, self sacrifice and genuine interest in helping her fellow man.

Whether it's through her counsel, teaching or friendship she seeks to make the world a better place for all of us and is always offering her generosity and care to everyone.

She has helped us on multiple occasions with life lessons, health counseling and business insights that you know are coming from a person of great knowledge and wisdom. If you have the pleasure of getting to know her I'm sure you will agree.

Sincerely,

Dr. Ark Pizarro, M.D.

There are so many positive things I could say about Mayim Vega, but today I'm going to focus on two that are very important to me. First is her willingness to always serve others, and second is her ability and openness to answering questions. She possesses extensive knowledge of health issues. My family and I never hesitate to contact her immediately whenever we have any questions about alternativesto conventional treatments that I already know of from my training in the management of diseases. I’d recommend her 100% any day!

- Dr. Gilsa Zorrilla, M.D.

Mayim has helped me tremendously over the last 3 years in my journey toward healing. There have been multiple times that I have inquired and received invaluable wisdom and knowledge from her. For example, I struggle with arthritis and have heart palpitations regularly. Mayim provided me with her formula for herbal calcium tea. After drinking it I felt a difference very quickly. Over time, my palpitations dissipated and my pain was relieved. I also had very healthy blood pressure after drinking the tea as she recommended for a few months. This greatly increased my quality of life. Additionally, I required more iron, as I as anemic and struggling, and she shared her super greens formula with me which also helped bring up my B vitamins. I saw a major improvement after drinking daily, and I began providing the drink to my children as well.

I was interested in naturopathic healing before acquiring Mayim's recommendations, but I have learned so much as a result. Herbal remedies, a whole foods diet, and many options for avoiding allopathic care have all added to my family's quality of life. More than that, though she has helped me navigate many trials and has been an integral part of my personal healing in that she has given me advice on how to process trauma, how to promote healing emotionally/physically, and how best to handle situations in my life. When I've needed honest advice, she has consistently listened and given fair advice in many areas of my life.

Lastly, Mayim is a successful entrepreneur from whom I have gotten many ideas from, while running a family business and has shared her knowledge and even challenges so that we as a family might be more successful. In all, she is an invaluable asset and cherished ally to our family and to me individually.

- Rivkah Jaton Maddox & Family

Dear Prospective Student / Client of Arukah or Mayim Coralyn Vega

I have been a longtime clientof Mayim and her holistic company, Arukah.

Mayim is someone who believes in the intelligence of the body, as well as its capacity for self-healing. She is also skilled in a wide variety of herbal remedies, many of which she has shared with me.

It is through Mayim that I was introduced to naturopathic perspectives and practices, such as those taught by the late Dr. John Christopher and his School of Natural Healing. Much of what I learned while studying these teachings inspiredand empoweredme to take even greater control of my health and wellness journey. For this alone, I will forever be grateful.

Mayim and the entire team at Arukah have always been extremely professional and helpful. She and Arukah are generous with their time and advice and I know that they really care about me. The guidance and remedies I've received over the past five years have equipped me to support my body through any challenge.

Because of Mayim, I have a deeper understanding of and appreciation for my body's natural healing processes. I have learned to not live in fear. I have learned to trust my intuition of what my body wants and needs. And I live in greater freedom and awareness of my body's innate wisdom.

Sincerely,

Whitley Bonner

Founder of Cob and Bale (Natural Buildling & EMF Shielding)

Naturopathic Herbalism

Holistic

Life Coaching

Online

Entrepreneurship

DISCLAIMER: The information you receive from Arukah.com and it's representatives, on social media, via email, through Zoom, a phone call or text message, or in person, is for educational purposes only. The information is NOT intended to serve as a substitute for diagnosis, treatment, or advice from a qualified, licensed medical professional preferably someone also knowledgeable in naturopathy, homeopathy, orthomolecular nutrition, integrative or functional medicine. The facts presented are offered as information only in order to empower you - our information and programs are not medical advice - and in no way should anyone infer that we or anyone appearing in any of our content found anywhere are practicing medicine. Any diet, health, or lifestyle program you undertake should be discussed with your physician or other licensed medical professional. Seek the advice of a medical professional for proper application of ANY material to your specific situation. NEVER stop or change your medications without consulting your physician. If you are having an emergency contact your emergency services: in the USA that’s 911.

DISCLAIMER: The information you receive from Arukah.com or Vega10 and it's representatives, on social media, via email, through Zoom, a phone call or text message, or in person, is for educational purposes only. The information is NOT intended to serve as a substitute for diagnosis, treatment, or advice from a qualified, licensed medical professiona. The facts presented are offered as information only in order to empower you with knowledge - our information and programs are not medical advice - and in no way should anyone infer that we or anyone appearing in any of our content found anywhere are practicing medicine. Any diet, health, or lifestyle program you undertake should be discussed with your physician. Seek the advice of a medical professional for proper application of ANY material to your specific situation. We must advise that you should never stop or change your medications without consulting your physician. If you are having an emergency contact your emergency services: in the USA that’s 911.