While a high-calorie diet and sedentary behavior are the most
commonly cited explanations for obesity, some previous research has
also linked exposure to artificial light at night to an increased
risk of weight gain, researchers note in JAMA Internal Medicine.
For the current study, researchers followed almost 44,000 generally
healthy women, ages 35 to 74. Many - about 17,000 - slept with a
nightlight in the room, while more than 13,000 left a light on
outside the bedroom and about 5,000 slept with a television or light
on in the bedroom.
At the start of the study, women were typically overweight but not
yet obese, according to their body mass index (BMI), a ratio of
weight relative to height. None of them worked shifts that could
interrupt sleep cycles.
After almost six years of follow-up, women who slept with a
television or light on in the room were 22 percent more likely to be
overweight and 33 percent more likely to be obese than women who
slept in total darkness without even a nightlight or the glow from
an alarm clock.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment and so it can't prove
whether or how exposure to artificial light at night might directly
cause obesity.
Still, said lead study author Dr. Yong-Moon Park, "Cutting off
lights at bedtime could reduce women's chances of becoming obese."
"In our study exposure to artificial light at night while sleeping
was associated with weight gain both in women with insufficient
sleep - less than seven hours - and women with sufficient sleep -
seven to nine hours," said Park, a researcher with the National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences at the National
Institutes of Health in Research Park Triangle, North Carolina.
"Thus, reducing exposure to artificial light at night while sleeping
adds an important tool for preventing weight gain," Park said by
email.
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Globally, 1.9 billion adults are overweight or obese, according to
the World Health Organization. Roughly 4 in 10 adults are
overweight, and more than 1 in 10 are obese, a condition that can
increase the risk of heart disease, diabetes, kidney problems, joint
disorders and certain cancers.
In the current study, women who slept with a television or light on
in their room were more likely to have a BMI that put them in the
overweight or obese range and to experience at least a 10 percent
increase in BMI during the study than women who slept in total
darkness.
A BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 is considered healthy, while 25 to 29.9
is overweight, 30 or above is obese and 40 or higher is severely or
morbidly obese. (An online BMI calculator is here: http://bit.ly/2Wvl2rq.)
One limitation of the study is that researchers relied on women to
report their own height and weight. Researchers also lacked data on
any changes in artificial light exposure at night over time that
might have impacted the results.
Even so, the results "make a strong case for artificial light
exposure at night being a risk factor for weight gain," said James
Gangwisch, a researcher at Columbia University in New York City who
wasn't involved in the study.
The television and any bedside or overhead lights need to go off,
and then people need to look for other light sources to eliminate,
he advised.
"Even with the lights off, our bedrooms are often aglow at night
from luminous clocks, light-emitting diodes from electronic devices,
and outside lighting that seeps through porous curtains and shades,"
Gangwisch said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2WzpCK7 JAMA Internal Medicine, online June
10, 2019.
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