Late Night Meals May Make You Fat
Posted on Sep 7th 2009 12:00PM by Bev SklarFiled Under: Diet & Weight Loss
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| Photo: kkielly, Flickr |
Just published on-line in the journal Obesity, the study examined feeding times in nocturnal mice. Critters fed a high-fat diet during a 12-hour span of normal sleeping hours gained more weight than mice eating the same diet during 12 natural wake-time hours. Like us, mice love high-fat food, and the sleepy-time eaters had a 48-percent increase in weight over baseline versus a 20-percent increase for the wake-time feeders. Interestingly, while both feeding groups consumed and moved the same amount over the six-week study period, mice fed during traditional sleeping hours averaged a 7.8-percent higher fat percentage. Not fair.
This is bad news for the second and third shift, and perhaps you should re-think watching late night TV with a plate of nachos in your lap. Whether you're a vampire-eater or not, total food intake and obesity are intertwined. Stay away from the late night barbecue tonight, and keep counting those calories and writing them down.













