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Not getting enough sleep can make you fat !!!


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#1 Blessed4Life2

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 08:50 AM

I came across this article about how insomnia and lack of sleep can hinder weight loss efforts.

Having a hard time losing weight? Nutritionist Madelyn Fernstrom, a ‘Today’ contributor, explains why poor sleep habits can pack on the pounds.


If you’ve tried to lose weight, you know it’s not easy. But for some of us, it’s even more difficult. Some dieters who are eating less and exercising more still have a hard time dropping those extra pounds. Why? One answer may lie in their sleep habits.
At my weight management clinic at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, one of the first questions I ask my patients is if they’re getting enough sleep. The typical response is usually “terrible,” “not enough,” “I’m up all night,” “I have no time,” or “I’m always tired.” So when I work out a weight-loss plan for these patients, I stress that they get enough sleep. Recent scientific studies show a strong relationship between sleep deprivation and weight gain, even though we don’t know exactly why this occurs. Here are some findings:
  • People who slept less than six hours a night experienced an increase in their body mass index (height-to-weight ratio) more than those who slept seven to eight hours.
  • Women who slept five hours a day, or less, gained more weight than those who slept seven hours a day, according to a 16-year study.
  • People who slept less than eight hours a day had larger increases in body fat than those who slept more.
How does sleep affect our bodies?
Our bodies’ major activities, including temperature regulation, hormone secretion, and brain chemistry production, run on a 24-hour cycle. When our bodies aren’t in a regular sleep pattern (think jet lag), hormones that regulate whether we feel full or hungry get out of whack, so all of our normal cues for eating are altered. An undiagnosed medical illness might also cause poor sleep habits. Someone with an underactive thyroid gland, for instance, will feel fatigued and gain weight. And someone who suffers from sleep apnea will wake up repeatedly during the night.

How does sleep affects eating?
When we’re tired, or feeling fatigued, we don’t always make the healthy food choices:
  • We’ll snack right before we go to bed to relax.
  • We’ll have a quick pick-me-up snack during the day, when we’re feeling sleepy or fatigued.
  • We won’t stick with our healthy eating plan. When we’re tired and sleep deprived, we tend to make poor food choices, and rely on higher calorie comfort food.
How to catch more zzz’s?
We live in a hectic world with many responsibilities. Trying to juggle work, family, chores, and recreation, it’s no wonder many of us think: “I can’t waste time sleeping.” We also live in stressful times, and often our mental stress prevents sleep, even when we set aside seven to eight hours. This is a real double whammy for weight loss: we eat to relieve stress, but also can’t sleep because we’re too stressed out!


Many people also have physical problems that awaken them from sleep, including sleep apnea and diabetes. (Diabetics often make several trips to the bathroom during the night.) Sleep apnea, often seen in overweight and obese people, is a condition of waking up repeatedly throughout the night. Often the person doesn’t realize that he’s waking during the night, but he’ll feel tired in the morning. Significant snoring usually accompanies this condition. So if you’re tired and gaining weight, it’s important to see your doctor to make sure you don’t medical problems.

While the obvious solution is to sleep eight hours each night, the real-life answer is not so easy. Here some steps you can take to help regain some control and minimize the likelihood that lack of sleep will sabotage your weight-loss efforts:
  • Try to set a regular schedule. Eat regularly — at least three to four times each day. Aim for seven hours of sleep. Creating some structure in your life. And make sleep a priority.
  • Don’t use food to “wake you up.” Take a power nap between 15 and 20 minutes instead. Always think before you eat and make a healthy choice. Avoid junk food, which may be comforting, but it won’t give you a metabolic pick-me-up. If you feel like you need an energy boost, eat a piece of fresh fruit, a half asandwich made with lean protein (such as turkey, chicken or tuna), somelow-fat cheese or low-fat yogurt, a 100-calorie protein bar, ora100-calorie pack of crackers.
  • Address your stress. Separate mental fatigue (stress) from physical fatigue. Try to reduce your stress levels by taking a 20-minute walk, and increasing your activity of daily living. This can help promote a more restful sleep. Wear a pedometer and monitor your activity. Aim for 10,000 steps daily for optimal weight management. In the beginning, set a more realistic goal of at least 5,000 steps a day.
  • See your doctor to rule out any medical illnesses contributing to lack of sleep and weight gain.
Madelyn Fernstrom’s Bottom Line: While we cannot always get a full eight hours of sleep every night, chronic sleep deprivation (for any reason) can be a major sabotage to losing weight and keeping it off. If you are committed to long term weight loss — or just weight stability – examine your sleep patterns. Getting more sleep can make a big difference in your waist line.



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#2 KHurley320

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 09:15 AM

This has to be true........because, since I started JC 10 days ago - I am sleeping more (I have the armband) and better. I am almost certain that since I removed the stress of worrying about always gaining weight, it's been a huge sleep advantage. The 30 min treadmill walk every day is probably helping, too.

Thanks for posting that :D

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#3 ashleyRN

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 09:21 AM

Great article melissa! tons of great info! thankyou! :D
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#4 I Called Jenny

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 10:15 AM

Thanks for sharing! :)
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#5 CMECRZN

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 08:46 PM

Nice one!! I found several years ago that I had sleep apnea and never knew what a good night sleep felt like. I would wake up with a headache a LOT. I have had a CPAP machine ever since and I sleep like a baby now! Sometimes my Bodymedia says I have > 95% sleep efficiency! Now that is sleeping HARD!!
Debbie

Your living is determined not so much by what life brings to you as by the
attitude you bring to life; not so much by what happens to you as by the way
your mind looks at what happens. - John Homer Miller


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#6 GretchenK

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 09:08 PM

I have chronic insomnia... this does make sense. I take every over the counter/herbal sleep aid.. nothing works. Ambien works, but it is so not good to take it long-term. My dr. won't even prescribe it to me anymore. Regular exercise does help, but has never alleviated my insomnia.. even when I was much thinner and exercising almost every day. My fiance got me a sleep noise machine, wear a sleep mask and spray special herbal 'sleep' spray on my pillow.. drink sleepy time tea and take all the herbal stuff... still only get 3-4 hours. :mellow: :wacko:

#7 GretchenK

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 09:09 PM

Oh.,. I can sleep if I drink a lot of wine... but, we all know the issues there...

#8 Blessed4Life2

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Posted 05 February 2012 - 09:34 PM

View PostGretchenK, on 05 February 2012 - 09:08 PM, said:

Ambien works, but it is so not good to take it long-term. My dr. won't even prescribe it to me anymore.

Yea Gretchen, I am one of those unfortunate ppl that took Ambien fairly long term ( a few months in a row, they arent meant to be taken consecutively like that).....when I finally went to discontinue it, I had a seizure.....yep, sure did! My dr said my body had gotten so use to them that I had withdrawals and thus had a seizure. I couldnt sleep for days after I stopped taking them....needless to say, I stay far away from Ambien....we dont get along. lol. My dr doesnt prescribe it anymore since more studies/facts have come out about hypnotic sleep aids, he said the bad effects out weigh the good. I should have had a clue it wasnt for me when my hubby would tell me things I did that I didnt remember. lol
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#9 msbanan2u

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 04:58 PM

Great article. Sleep was one of the reasons I went ahead and got the armband. I was really curious to see how much or how little I sleep. It turns out that I average about 6 hours per night, but never sleep longer than an hour at a time. At first I thought it was just because I was home by myself while hubby is on a business trip but now my son has moved back home and I'm still waking up throughout the night. I would love to have an unassisted full night's sleep. I just don't know how to do that!
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#10 Jen.M

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 07:21 AM

Ambien can be scary stuff. I was on it years and years ago (yep, I'm another long-time insomniac), but they admonished me that I should only take it right before bed so that I could try to be asleep within 30 minutes. One night I couldn't get to sleep that fast, I was tossing and turning, and the next thing I knew I was hallucinating. All of my laundry had gotten up out of drawers and baskets and was having a cocktail party in my room. I lived alone at the time and while it sounds completely silly now, it terrified me at the time because I didn't know what was happening. I've never touched it again. I still sleep like crap - I don't go quite to the level Gretchen does, but I do wear earplugs and have these headphones called "sleepphones" that I wear over them with binaural sleep-inducing music playing in them all night, plus a sleep number bed and a memory foam pad on top of that, and still I wake up a bunch of times at night and can't get back to sleep. So frustrating! I'd hoped the weight loss would help, and it has alleviated some of the issues, but I guess getting my brain to shut down is a bigger issue I've still got to deal with. :)

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#11 Blessed4Life2

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 07:33 AM

Jen, have you ever tried Melatonin? Its all natural.....your body produces it but as we age it decreases. It really helps me, but I dont take it every night b/c my body gets used to it so fast and becomes ineffective. Its not heavy duty stuff but does help.
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#12 Jen.M

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 07:49 AM

Yep, I do have a bottle of melatonin in my medicine cabinet, but I can't take it during the week. It just leaves me WAY too groggy in the morning and I struggle all the next day. So I generally only take it on Friday nights (Saturday mornings are the only day I don't have to be up early - Sunday morning is my day to be up with my daughter when she wakes up). It does help some, but I still wake up feeling tired.

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#13 Blessed4Life2

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 07:53 AM

View PostJen.M, on 07 February 2012 - 07:49 AM, said:

Yep, I do have a bottle of melatonin in my medicine cabinet, but I can't take it during the week. It just leaves me WAY too groggy in the morning and I struggle all the next day. So I generally only take it on Friday nights (Saturday mornings are the only day I don't have to be up early - Sunday morning is my day to be up with my daughter when she wakes up). It does help some, but I still wake up feeling tired.

Yea, it does me the same way when I take the 3 mg......maybe 1/2 yours into and see if you still feel groggy. I have found when I take the 1 mg. I dont feel groggy the next day.
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#14 GretchenK

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 08:06 AM

I have had some similar experiences on Ambien... my fiance asked me one time the next morning if I was drunk the night before when he got home from work.. (had not had a drop). I didn't remember any of it, but he said I was talking in slow motion and making no sense. Another time, I woke up in a bed full of crumbs and a box of wheat thins by the bed... don't remember eating them. I know it is really bad stuff, but it is the only thing that has ever gotten me to sleep for 7 straight hours (still not worth it). On Sat night I took 5mg Melatonin, a full dose of Valerian and a dose of Tryptophan all at once... slept 3.5 hours. When I go to different doctors about it, they never tell me anything new.

#15 Blessed4Life2

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 08:29 AM

View PostGretchenK, on 07 February 2012 - 08:06 AM, said:

I have had some similar experiences on Ambien... my fiance asked me one time the next morning if I was drunk the night before when he got home from work.. (had not had a drop). I didn't remember any of it, but he said I was talking in slow motion and making no sense. Another time, I woke up in a bed full of crumbs and a box of wheat thins by the bed... don't remember eating them. I know it is really bad stuff, but it is the only thing that has ever gotten me to sleep for 7 straight hours (still not worth it). On Sat night I took 5mg Melatonin, a full dose of Valerian and a dose of Tryptophan all at once... slept 3.5 hours. When I go to different doctors about it, they never tell me anything new.

Bless ur heart Gretchen.....so sorry sleep eludes you so girl, and meds arent working too well either. Hang in there hun. ((((hugs))))
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"reached my goal (-64 lbs) and now ROCKIN' maintenance....WooHoooooo"

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#16 CMECRZN

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 10:45 AM

Gretchen, have you considered having a sleep study done? I found several years ago that I was waking up many times during the night like you are saying. I had a sleep study done and they discovered that I was stopping breathing like 26 times per hour. When I would stop breathing, I would jolt myself awake. I was prescribed a CPAP machine and now I sleep through the night HARD. Many times I don't even move the entire night. Just sleep!!
Debbie

Your living is determined not so much by what life brings to you as by the
attitude you bring to life; not so much by what happens to you as by the way
your mind looks at what happens. - John Homer Miller


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#17 GretchenK

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 08:10 PM

Melissa, thank you... I have suffered with this most of my life. Frustrating..

Debbie, that is a good idea.. I have thought of doing it before, but have not made the move. Thanks for the advice.. I am glad it was a good solution for you!!!

Cheers,
Gretchen

#18 lynz10

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Posted 25 February 2012 - 05:02 AM

Thanks for sharing, I also struggle with my sleep. Since getting the armband I have been able to track my sleep habits and have convinced my boyfriend to let me sleep whenever or where ever I am. The more weight I lose the more I seem to be sleeping and the more energy I have during the day. I'm also waiting to attend a sleep clinic so hopefully they can help me figure out why I'm sleeping so little.





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