Over two years, lighting exposure was tied to abdominal weight gain
regardless of other factors like calorie intake, exercise and what
time people went to sleep or woke up, the study found.
“Our results are reasonable because human beings have evolved under
the lighting condition of daytime high and nighttime low light
intensity,” said lead author Dr. Kenji Obayashi of Nara Medical
University School of Medicine.
This is the first evidence in humans that disturbing circadian
rhythms (the internal body clock) with a different pattern of light
exposure relates to obesity risk, Obayashi told Reuters Health by
email.
“In addition, our results added more details on the previous
knowledge of the association between shift work and the obesity
risk,” he said.
The researchers objectively measured ambient light exposure with
wrist light meters over a two-day period for 1,110 study
participants with an average age of 72. They also measured waist
circumference, height and body weight and administered
questionnaires on smoking, drinking and socioeconomic status. These
measurements were repeated an average of 21 months later.
At the beginning of the study, 138 people had abdominal obesity,
which the researchers defined as a waist-to-height ratio of 0.6 or
higher. The other 972 people did not have abdominal obesity.
The study team measured light exposure in lux, a unit based on human
perception of brightness. For example, outdoor light levels on a
bright day are about 11,000 lux while at twilight they would be
about 11 lux. Indoors, next to the window on a bright day, light
levels might be around 1,000 lux while interior areas away from the
window might have just 25-50 lux.
Based on light exposure measurements throughout the day and night
and compared to participants without abdominal obesity, researchers
found that those with big waists at the beginning of the study
period tended to be exposed to lower light intensity from rising
time to early evening and higher light intensity after that.
At follow-up, people who were exposed to light levels of 3 lux or
more in the late evening and during the night were much more likely
to have increased their waist size.
Conversely, people who spent a longer time exposed to 500 lux or
more in the morning were more likely to have reduced their waist
size at follow-up.
An increase in body mass index (BMI), a measure of weight relative
to height, over time was also associated with evening or nighttime
exposure to higher light intensity, according to the results in the
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
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“Artificial light exposure during the solar night is associated with
an increased risk of obesity,” said Dr. Charles Czeisler, chief of
the division of sleep and circadian disorders at Brigham and Women’s
Hospital in Boston, who was not part of the study.
Light exposure during the first and last hour of sleep has been tied
to weight gain, while more light during the solar day has been tied
to weight loss, he told Reuters Health.
The new study only collected light data on two days, which may not
have been representative for all people, and it is possible that
people who have lights on at night have them on because they are
eating, but the results are still exciting, he said.
Inappropriate light exposure may alter human melatonin secretion
pattern, a hormone associated with energy expenditure, Obayashi
said.
“From the viewpoint of circadian misalignment, light sources with
short wave length (blue light) have more effect on human biological
rhythms,” he said. “So using these light sources (blue light) in
evening/nighttime would promote obesity more.”
Younger people are more sensitive to ambient light than the elderly,
he noted, so it may have even more of an effect for them.
Trying to get more sunlight in daytime and less artificial light
from TVs, smartphones and bedroom lights at night may be best for
obesity prevention, he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2a2FBZ6 Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and
Metabolism, online July 6, 2016.
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