Monday, February 16, 2026
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Eating only during daytime may prevent heart problems due to night shift: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Apr, 2025 12:56 PM
  • Eating only during daytime may prevent heart problems due to night shift: Study

New Delhi, April 8 (IANS) While shift work is a known risk factor for cardiovascular events, a new study on Tuesday showed that eating only during the daytime may prevent the risks.

Sleep timing has been a major area of focus, but researchers from Mass General Brigham, US, and the University of Southampton, UK, stated that food timing could be a bigger risk factor when it comes to cardiovascular health.

Previous studies have shown that working the night shift is associated with serious health risks, including to the heart, due to circadian misalignment -- the mistiming of our behavioural cycle relative to our internal body clock.

The researchers found that cardiovascular risk factors including autonomic nervous system markers, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (which increases the risk of blood clots), and blood pressure increased after night work.

However, the risk factors stayed the same in the participants who only ate during the daytime.

“Avoiding or limiting eating during nighttime hours may benefit night workers, those who experience insomnia or sleep-wake disorders, individuals with variable sleep/wake cycles, and people who travel frequently across time zones,” said the team, in the paper, published in the journal Nature Communications.

The study included 20 healthy young participants. For two weeks they had no access to windows, watches, or electronics that would clue their body clocks into the time.

The participants followed a "constant routine protocol," a controlled laboratory setup that can tease apart the effects of circadian rhythms from those of the environment and behaviours (for example, sleep/wake, light/dark patterns).

During this protocol, the participants stayed awake for 32 hours in a dimly lit environment, maintaining constant body posture and eating identical snacks every hour.

After that, they participated in simulated night work and were assigned to either eat during the nighttime (as most night workers do) or only during the daytime.

Importantly, both groups had an identical schedule of naps, and, thus, any differences between the groups were not due to differences in sleep schedule.

"Our study controlled for every factor that you could imagine that could affect the results, so we can say that it's the food timing effect that is driving these changes in the cardiovascular risk factors," said lead author Sarah Chellappa, an associate professor at the University of Southampton.

While further research is necessary to show the long-term health effects of daytime versus nighttime eating, the team said the results are "promising" and suggest that people could improve their health by adjusting food timing.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Alcohol addiction recovery may trigger insomnia

Alcohol addiction recovery may trigger insomnia
For people in the early phases of recovery from alcohol addiction, insomnia is a "prevalent and persistent" problem, says a study....

Alcohol addiction recovery may trigger insomnia

High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing

High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing
Danish researchers have found that signs of brain ageing, which manifests itself in forms such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, could be...

High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality
Women born with a rare condition that gives them a Y chromosome do not only look like women physically, they also have the same brain responses...

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors

Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors
Practising meditation has a positive physical impact at the cellular level in breast cancer survivors, new research shows....

Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors

Long term shift work hampers memory

Long term shift work hampers memory
Long term shift work can help you earn more but it could adversely affect your brain functions, such as memory and processing speed, says a research....

Long term shift work hampers memory

Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart

Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart
Poor eating habits can affect your heart for a long time and the effects can persist long after dietary habits are improved, shows a research....

Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart