Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Artificial Light At Night Can Make You Feel Sick

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Mar, 2015 01:55 PM
    Over-exposure to artificial light at night has serious long-term health implications like tendency to breast cancer, obesity, diabetes, depression, and possibly other forms of cancer, says a new study.
     
    "It's a new analysis and synthesis of what we know up to now on the effect of lighting on our health," said Richard Stevens University of Connecticut, Farmington (Uconn).
     
    "We don't know for certain, but there's growing evidence that the long-term implications of this have ties to breast cancer, obesity, diabetes, depression, and possibly other form of cancers," he said.
     
    Inadequate exposure to natural light during the day and overexposure to artificial light at night is not conducive to the body's natural sleep/wake cycle.
     
    Stevens and co-author Yong Zhu from Yale University explained the known short-term and suspected long-term impacts of circadian disruption in an article published in the British journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.
     
    "It's become clear that typical lighting is affecting our physiology," said Stevens.
     
    "But lighting can be improved. We're learning that better lighting can reduce these physiological effects. By that we mean dimmer and longer wavelengths in the evening, and avoiding the bright blue of e-readers, tablets and smart phones," he added.
     
    Those devices emit enough blue light when used in the evening to suppress the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin and disrupt the body's circadian rhythm, the biological mechanism that enables restful sleep.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Simple blood tests can save hepatitis patients

    Simple blood tests can save hepatitis patients
    Blood tests can save more than 80 percent hepatitis C patients and over 60 percent hepatitis B patients when combined with proper prevention and treatment, say experts.

    Simple blood tests can save hepatitis patients

    Strong parental bonds make kids smart

    Strong parental bonds make kids smart
    Sharing a strong bond with your kids is vital for them to socialise, make friends and enjoy positive, close relationships with others, a study shows.

    Strong parental bonds make kids smart

    Natural beauty favoured by most but how natural is it?

    Natural beauty favoured by most but how natural is it?
    Almost three quarters of men say they find women more attractive when they wear less makeup; however what they think is the natural look is more likely to take hours of effort and plenty of special makeup tricks, says a research.

    Natural beauty favoured by most but how natural is it?

    Menthol cigarettes lure teenagers to smoke more: Study

    Menthol cigarettes lure teenagers to smoke more: Study
    Flavoured cigarettes appeal the youth and teenagers, who use menthol cigarettes, more per day than their peers who smoke non-menthols, says a study.

    Menthol cigarettes lure teenagers to smoke more: Study

    Tap brain's self-repairing mechanism to fight diseases

    Tap brain's self-repairing mechanism to fight diseases
    Forget drugs and neurogenesis, the self-repairing mechanism of the adult brain can help preserve brain function and can be targeted as a potential therapeutic intervention in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Prion or Parkinson's, says a study.

    Tap brain's self-repairing mechanism to fight diseases

    Know the science of cake cutting

    Know the science of cake cutting
    You may cut a cake in triangular shapes every year your birthday comes calling but that may not be the best way to enjoy the yummy dessert, especially if it is stored for some friends who missed the date.

    Know the science of cake cutting