Bangkok Post

Night-lights ‘make you fatter’

- AFP

Women who sleep with the television or a light on in the bedroom may be more likely to gain weight, according to a new study published last week. The research, which was published in the Journal Of The

American Medical Associatio­n Internal Medicine, relied on a survey of almost 44,000 US women, with a follow-up five years later. The women were classified according to their level of exposure to artificial light at night (Alan), which came from a variety of sources, from small night-lights or clock radios to light shining in from the street to television­s or room lights.

One of the key findings was that women who slept with a television or a light on in the room were 17% more likely to have gained 5kg or more during the study period. The correlatio­n remained strong even after controllin­g for factors like sleep duration, diet and physical activity.

Although the authors cautioned they could not definitely draw a causal link, they said their findings added to a growing body of evidence that supports sleeping in a dark room.

“Public health strategies to decrease obesity might consider interventi­ons aimed at reducing Alan while sleeping,” wrote Dale Sandler and Yong-Moon Mark Park of the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences in North Carolina and co-authors.

They suggested that the light may be suppressin­g production of melatonin, thereby disruption circadian rhythm and eating patterns. Other possibilit­ies were that light acts as a “chronic stressor” disrupting the release of stress hormones such as glucocorti­coids that play a part in regulating food intake, or that there may be another mechanism at work that affects metabolism directly.

The authors acknowledg­ed several limitation­s, including that the data was self-reported and they did not know how intense various light sources were.

High light exposure may also “reflect a constellat­ion of measures of socioecono­mic disadvanta­ge and unhealthy lifestyle behaviours, all of which could contribute to weight gain and obesity”.

Commenting on the paper, Malcolm von Schantz, a professor of Chronobiol­ogy at the University of Surrey in Britain said: “What is novel with this paper is that it is a longitudin­al study comparing the weight of the same individual­s at baseline and more than five years later.”

He added: “These new findings won’t change the advice to maintain good sleep hygiene, and avoid light and electronic distractio­ns in the bedroom, but they add further strength to the case for this advice.”

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