HealthPop
By

Ryan Jaslow /

CBS News/ May 1, 2012, 12:46 PM

Sleeping longer may counter effects of "obesity genes"

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(CBS News) Recent research suggests not getting a full night's sleep can raise a person's risk for obesity. A new study may have found a way to reverse the effect:

The study found people who slept more than nine hours each night may suppress genes that contribute to weight gain.

41 million American workers don't get enough sleep, CDC says
Study confirms not enough sleep raises diabetes, obesity risks
Study: Sleeping less may mean you'll eat more

So much for conventional wisdom that says sleeping all day will make you fat.

For the new study, published in the May 1 issue of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine's journal Sleep, researchers examined sleep habits from 1,088 pairs of twins - 604 identical, 484 non-identical - to see what effect sleep duration had on the genetic and environmental influence of weight gain, as measured by body mass index (BMI). BMI is a ratio that divides a person's weight by the square of their right, and a BMI over 25 signifies overweight and a BMI over 30 suggests obesity.

Previous studies have shown that genetics may influence obesity-contributing factors including glucose metabolism, energy use, fatty acid storage and feelings of fullness, leading some to dub them "obesity genes".

By studying the twins, who averaged age 36, the researchers determined that for those who slept less than seven hours per night, genetic influences accounted for 70 percent of BMI changes with environmental factors such as diet and exercise accounting for the rest. For twins sleeping more than nine hours, genetic factors were attributed to only 32 percent of weight changes.

"The less sleep you get, the more your genes contribute to how much you weigh," study author Nathaniel Watson, an associate professor of neurology and co-director of the University of Washington Medicine Sleep Center in Seattle, told USA Today.

Watson said the results suggest shorter sleep may allow for an environment where obesity genes flourish or that extended sleep suppresses expression of obesity genes.

"In theory, you have control over environmental factors, so the choices you make may have a bigger impact on your weight the longer you sleep," Watson told ABC News.

Earlier studies have found a link between lack of sleep and obesity risk. A study presented at an American Heart Association meeting in March found people who get about a third less than their average amount of sleep time consumed more than 500 additional calories each day, HealthPop reported. The researchers said if that rate persisted a person could gain about a pound per week.

Sleep expert Jodi Mindell, a psychology professor at Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia, told USA Today of the new study, "If you're trying to lose weight, getting enough sleep gives you a fighting chance."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
18 Comments Add a Comment
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foo8259 says:
"... genetics may influence obesity-contributing factors including glucose metabolism, energy use, fatty acid storage and feelings of fullness, leading some to dub them "obesity genes". And all of these so called "obesity contributors" are nullified or blunted by going on a low-carb, high-fat Diet. I lost over 50 pounds, without increasing exercise and now I sleep even less hours and I no longer require that mid-afternoon nap!
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wizardlady says:
And, where did this observation study come from....A SLEEP CENTER. And, why would they not promote more sleep? And, anything to help understand why we have so many overweight people!

How can one be expected to get 9 hours of sleep, go to an 8-hour per day job plus use an additional 3 plus hours for commute and prep time, leaving only FOUR out of a 24 hour day for LIVING.

I liked a saying of my Mother...."I don't need much sleep now for I can sleep when I am dead."
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codestud3 says:
well, liberal stoners had it right all along... time for scooby snack...
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aintfakin says:
no wonder 76% of republicans are obese. Along with their love of consumption they are awake all night in here doing their part for the right wing noise machine
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askagain replies:
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Another worthless comment.
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Dreadnut says:
More sleep = less time available to stuff food in your mouth.
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CBSname5322 says:
Common mistake. It is an observational study. Cause and effect are not established. People with stressful live sleep less, require more calories to deal with stress emotionally. Reduced sleeping time is likely to be a result of the lifestyle.
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CBSname5322 says:
Common mistake. It is an observational study. Cause and effect are not established. People with stressful live sleep less, require more calories to deal with stress emotionally. Reduced sleeping time is likely to be a result of the lifestyle.
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CBSname5322 says:
Common mistake. It is an observational study. Cause and effect are not established. People with stressful live sleep less, require more calories to deal with stress emotionally. Reduced sleeping time is likely to be a result of the lifestyle.
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FormerUSMCSergeant says:
Obesity has to be reduced.

Fat people cost us all an aditional $200 billion/yr in medical costs meaning their gluttony costs us all real money.

Either reduce it or sell health insurance by the pound.
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LtSmily says:
What they didn't tell you was that there are multiple studies that show more than 9 hours of sleep increases risk for heart disease by about 60% because of hormonal changes that occur during sleep. The rule of thumb, more than 6 less than 9 still applies. And pay no attention to BMI, it was never intended to be used in a medical fashion. Medical science will always lag behind the big pharma companies with huge advertising budgets, but teh truth about BMI is being spread slowly but surely.
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