Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Good sleep cuts appetite for sweet, salty food

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Jun, 2019 08:57 PM

    A good night's sleep helps in reducing the desire for sweet and salty foods, intake of sugar and caloric content, says a study.

    It is known that sleeping less than seven hours is associated with an increased cardio-metabolic risk -- heart disease risk and metabolic disorders -- but increasing the sleep duration can help reduce it, said lead author Rob Henst, Associate Professor at the University of Cape Town in South Africa.

    In the study, published in the Journal of Sleep Research, researchers found that sleep extension was associated with improved measures of insulin sensitivity and reductions in overall appetite, desire for sweet and salty foods, intake of daily free sugar, and percentage of daily caloric intake from protein.

    "It is now apparent that poor sleep quality may be an equally important risk factor for cardio-metabolic diseases," said Dale Rae from the varsity.

    For the study, the researchers studied a data of 138 persons who were either healthy, healthy short-sleeping, overweight short-sleeping, or pre- or hypertensive short-sleeping individuals.

     

     

     

     

     

    MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

    Spirituality can speed up patients' recovery

    Spirituality can speed up patients' recovery
    When there is little hope, meaning and purpose in a patient's life, spirituality plays a key role in the patient's recovery from illness, finds a fascinating study....

    Spirituality can speed up patients' recovery

    How brown fat cells could help combat type 2 diabetes, obesity

    A newly identified signalling pathway that stimulates glucose uptake in brown fat cells might be useful for treating type 2 diabetes and obesity, says a new study....

    How brown fat cells could help combat type 2 diabetes, obesity

    Hospital workers wash hands less often as shift nears end

    Hospital workers wash hands less often as shift nears end
    Hospital workers who deal directly with patients wash their hands less frequently as their workday progresses, says a study....

    Hospital workers wash hands less often as shift nears end

    Ways to stop your sugar craving

    Ways to stop your sugar craving
    Totally shunning sweet delights can sometimes increase your temptation towards sweets. So, instead of running away from satiating your sugar ....

    Ways to stop your sugar craving

    Walking could arrest memory decline

    Walking could arrest memory decline
    Living in a a neighbourhood that encourages walking could help the elderly stave off cognitive decline, says a new research....

    Walking could arrest memory decline

    Teenagers know more about asthma than parents

    Teenagers know more about asthma than parents
    Children are more knowledgeable about how one can control asthma than their parents, says a new study....

    Teenagers know more about asthma than parents