Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Night Owls More Likely To Have Higher Body Fat And At Greater Diabetes Risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Apr, 2015 01:16 PM
    Love to watch late-night TV or chat with your girlfriend till the wee hours? You may run a greater risk of developing diabetes than early risers despite getting equal amount of sleep, a new study warns.
     
    The study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism examined the difference between night and morning chronotypes, or a person's natural sleep-wake cycle.
     
    Besides diabetes, night owls, people who stay up late and get up late in the morning, are also more likely to develop metabolic syndrome and sarcopenia - gradual loss of muscle mass - than early risers, the findings showed.
     
    Staying awake till late night is likely to cause sleep loss, poor sleep quality, and eating at inappropriate times, which might eventually lead to metabolic change, the researchers noted.
     
    "Regardless of lifestyle, people who stayed up late faced a higher risk of developing health problems like diabetes or reduced muscle mass than those who were early risers," said one of the study's authors Nan Hee Kim from the Korea University College of Medicine in Ansan, South Korea.
     
    "This could be caused by night owls' tendency to have poorer sleep quality and to engage in unhealthy behaviours like smoking, late-night eating and a sedentary lifestyle," Kim said.
     
    The study examined sleeping habits and metabolism in 1,620 participants in the population-based cohort Korean Genome Epidemiology Study (KoGES).
     
    The study participants were between the ages of 47 and 59.
     
    Even though the evening chronotypes tended to be younger, they had higher levels of body fat and triglycerides, or fats in the blood, than morning chronotypes.
     
    Night owls also were more likely to have sarcopenia, a condition where the body gradually loses muscle mass.
     
    Men who were evening chronotypes were more likely have diabetes or sarcopenia than early risers.
     
    Among women, night owls tended to have more belly fat and a great risk of metabolic syndrome, a cluster of risk facts that raise the risk of heart disease, stroke and diabetes.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Company blames heat for why nasal spray flu vaccine didn't work well in kids against swine flu

    Company blames heat for why nasal spray flu vaccine didn't work well in kids against swine flu
     The makers of the nasal spray version of the flu vaccine say now they know why it has failed to protect young U.S. children against swine flu — fragile doses got too warm.

    Company blames heat for why nasal spray flu vaccine didn't work well in kids against swine flu

    Potential treatment for drug-resistant TB discovered

    Potential treatment for drug-resistant TB discovered
    Researchers led by an Indian-origin scientist have developed a new drug that may serve as a treatment against multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, a form of the disease that cannot be cured with conventional therapies.

    Potential treatment for drug-resistant TB discovered

    India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection

    India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection
    Researchers in the US, led by an India-born physician scientist, have said they have developed a new blood test that has the potential to detect cancers in their earliest stages.

    India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection

    IUDs, Hormone Implants Rise In Use As Birth Control Among Us Women; Pills Still Most Popular

    IUDs, Hormone Implants Rise In Use As Birth Control Among Us Women; Pills Still Most Popular
    CHICAGO — Long-acting but reversible methods of birth control are becoming increasingly popular among U.S. women, with IUDs redesigned after safety scares and the development of under-the-skin hormone implants, a government report shows.

    IUDs, Hormone Implants Rise In Use As Birth Control Among Us Women; Pills Still Most Popular

    Long, Hot Saunas May Boost Survival, Reduce Fatal Heart Problems, Finnish Research In Men Says

    Long, Hot Saunas May Boost Survival, Reduce Fatal Heart Problems, Finnish Research In Men Says
    CHICAGO — Frequent sauna baths may help you live longer, a study of Finnish men suggests. It would be welcome news if proven true — in Finland where hot, dry saunas are commonplace, and for Americans shivering in a snowy Nordic-like winter.

    Long, Hot Saunas May Boost Survival, Reduce Fatal Heart Problems, Finnish Research In Men Says

    Canadian Doctor Recalls Toll Measles Took On Kids Before MMR Vaccine

    Canadian Doctor Recalls Toll Measles Took On Kids Before MMR Vaccine
    TORONTO — Dr. Frank Jagdis knows measles. As a medical student in the pre-vaccination 1960s and later as a practising pediatrician in Victoria, he saw the toll that measles took on children who came down with the viral infection.

    Canadian Doctor Recalls Toll Measles Took On Kids Before MMR Vaccine