 You know the feeling you get when you learn something new about a health problem you've been trying to reverse? Maybe high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease? Well, there's nothing I like better than bringing you the information that will help you do just that. Welcome to the Nutrition Facts Podcast, I'm your host, Dr. Michael Greger. Today we discover the health benefits of sleep, and we start with the connection between the lack of sleep and weight gain. Population studies have found short sleep duration has been associated with obesity in both children and adults. Observational studies can never prove cause and effect, though. Maybe the obesity is leading to sleep loss instead of the other way around. Obesity can cause arthritis, acid reflux, and apnea, all of which can interfere with sleep. The relationship between obesity and sleep apnea, where your breathing repeatedly stops and starts throughout the night, may be explained by increased tongue fat, fat deposited inside the base of the tongue that may contribute to obstructing your airway when you sleep on your back. The reverse causation explanation of the link between obesity and inadequate sleep is bolstered by the finding that weight loss interventions can improve daytime sleepiness. Potential confounding factors also abound. For example, people with lower socioeconomic status often work less desirable hours, such as rotating or overnight shifts, or may live in noisier neighborhoods with poorer air quality, more crime. The link between inadequate sleep and obesity persists after controlling for these kinds of factors, but you can't control for everything. You can't know for sure if sleep deprivation leads to weight gain until you put it to the test. Have people pull an all-nighter and they get hungry and choose larger portions, or randomize people to shave even just a few hours to sleep off every night. They start eating an average of 677 calories more a day compared to the normal sleep control group. Other individual responses vary widely, anywhere from eating 813 calories less per day to as many as 1437 calories more. On average, studies found sleep deprivation led people to overeat by about 180 to 560 calories a day. More strict people sleep and they also start craving unhealthier choices, more snacks, more foods that are fatty and sugary, strict people in a brain scanner after staying awake all night or after a few nights of 4-hour sleep, and their reward pathways light up brighter in response to high-calorie foods. Sleep deprivation bumps the levels of the cheap endocannabinoid in the body, the natural chemical we synthesize that binds to the same receptors as the active ingredient in marijuana. This may help explain the nighttime nibbling. On the calories outside of the equation, some short sleepers may take the extra time to exercise, others will be so sleepy they exercise less. The extra wakefulness may raise calorie expenditure up to about 100 calories a day, but if sleep-deprived individuals are overeating hundreds of calories, over time sleep deprivation may end up putting the wide in wide awake. When sufficient sleep inadvertently leading to such higher calorie intake, it's no surprise that 4 out of 5 studies involving as few as 2 to 5 nights of sleep restriction found an increase in body weight. In other words, if you sleep less, you may gain more. OK, but here's where it gets crazy. Even if you control calorie intake, you still lose more fat when you get more sleep. Fat subjects who normally got between 6 and a half to 8 and a half hours of sleep a night were randomized to two weeks of either 8 and a half hours of sleep a night or 5 and a half hours of sleep on the same calorie-controlled diet. Then the group switched and spent another two weeks in the opposite regimen, so they spent a month living in the labs so their diets and sleep could be totally controlled and monitored. And just looking at the scales, sleep duration didn't seem to matter. During both periods, they ate the same number of calories and lost the same amount of weight. But most of the weight lost while getting 8 and a half hours was fat, whereas most of the weight lost when only getting 5 and a half hours of sleep a night was lean body mass, same diet, but with more sleep. They ended up losing more than twice as much body fat, so you snooze, you lose fat. In our next story, we discover how getting just one more hour of sleep a night may help with weight control. I featured a study that found that curtailing sleep can cut your rate of body fat loss in half while exacerbating the loss of lean mass. To get better insight into what was going on, researchers took fat and muscle biopsies from people after a night of sleep loss. In terms of genes that were turned on and off, molecular signatures were discovered suggesting muscle breakdown and fat buildup. That was after an all-nighter, though, and in the weight loss study, sleep-restricted groups ended up getting little more than 5 hours a night. What about a more realistic scenario, like sleeping just one hour less a night? Overweight adults were randomized to 8 weeks of a calorie-restricted diet, or the same diet, combined with just 5 days a week of one hour a night less sleep. The sleep-restricted group achieved the one hour a day less sleep on weekdays, but ended up sleeping an hour more on the weekend days, so overall they just cut about 3 hours of sleep out of their week, with just those few hours a week made any weight loss difference? On the scale, no. But in the normal sleep group, 80% of the weight loss was fat, whereas in the group just missing a few hours of sleep a week, it was the opposite—80% of the loss was lean. This shows that a few hours of catch-up sleep on the weekends is insufficient, and may in fact be contributing to the problem based on the social jet lag effect I explored in a previous video. A comparable study was designed for kids, but the sleeping periods only lasted a week. 8 to 11-year-olds were randomized to either increase or decrease their time in bed by one and a half hours per night for a week, then switch to the following week. They'd an average of 134 calories more on the days they slept less, and gained in that week about half a pound compared to the sleep-more week. The question then becomes, would sleeping more facilitate weight loss? When it comes to body fat, can we just sleep it off? The benefit of interventional studies is you can demonstrate cause and effect, but observational studies can allow you to more easily track people and their behaviors over a longer time span. For example, researchers followed a group of mostly overweight individuals who started out averaging less than six hours of sleep a night for more than five years. During that time, about half maintained that schedule, but the other half increased their sleep duration up to seven or eight hours a night and ended up gaining five pounds less fat. A study entitled Sleeping Habits Predict the Magnitude of Fat Loss among those cutting calories found that every extra hour of sleep at night was associated with an extra one and a half pounds of weight loss over a period of about three to six months. It's not the same as randomizing people to extra sleep though. I mean, maybe they were sleeping more because they were exercising more and that's the real reason they lost more weight. Getting people to bump their sleep from five and a half hours up to seven can lead to an overall decrease in appetite within two weeks, particularly for sugary and salty foods. A four-week study getting habitual short sleepers to sleep an extra hour at night led them to consume about two fewer spoonfuls of sugar a day compared to the control group, but this didn't translate into any changes in body composition. A 12-week study, on the other hand, randomized the overweight and obese individuals to a weight loss intervention with or without a sleep component found that the sleep group lost weight significantly faster. A national cross-sectional survey suggested lower obesity rates among kids in households that regularly ate dinner together as a family, got adequate sleep in limited screen times, and so Harvard researchers decided to try to put those behaviors to the test. A six-month randomized trial to improve household routines for obesity prevention among young children resulted in a lower BMI. Normally, it's hard to tease out the effects of multi-component interventions, but in this case, exhortations to limit overall TV watching didn't work, and the families were already eating together six days a week, and so that didn't change much either. The only thing they were able to get the kids to significantly alter was their sleep, and so the improved weight outcomes may be attributed, at least in part, to the three-quarters of an hour average increase in nightly sleep. Overall, most sleep improvement interventions tended to show improved weight loss. I was intrigued to look up the one study that didn't. The nice thing about systematic reviews, as opposed to so-called narrative reviews, is that they exhaustively include mention of every study that meets some pre-specified criteria. This keeps reviewers from cherry-picking, but it can also lead to the inclusion of some strange studies. In this case, a randomized controlled trial of didgeridoo playing the Indigenous Australian wind instrument, those randomized to the didgeridoo to improve their sleep quality did not lose any weight, but they also failed to improve the quality of their sleep, or likely that of their neighbors. Did you know that lactoosin, the hypnotic component of lettuce, is a natural dietary remedy for insomnia? Here's the story. There is a perception that time spent asleep is time wasted, but is widely recognized that inadequate sleep is associated with multiple acute and chronic conditions and results in an increased risk of death and disease. Forced people to go one week with only six hours of sleep a night, you can change expression more than 700 genes. The most dire effect may be endothelial dysfunction. The endothelium is the thin layer of cells that covers the internal surface of blood vessels, and is responsible for allowing our arteries to relax and dilate back open properly. Randomized people for about a week to get five rather than seven hours of sleep, and just that two-hour difference a night resulted in a significant impairment in artery function. Okay, but what do these numbers mean? I mean how bad is a week of five-hour nights? Sleep deprivation is no joke. The magnitude of impairment is similar to that reported in people who smoke, have diabetes, or have coronary artery disease. No wonder people who sleep less than seven hours a night may experience a 12 to 35% increased risk of premature death, compared to those who get a full seven hours. Yet a significant proportion of the population may routinely get less than that. Sufficiently long restful sleep sessions each night are said to be an indisputable cornerstone of good health. Okay, so what can we do about it? Those who have a sleep apnea, a common consequence of obesity that interferes with sleep, benefit from the use of CPAP machines while they're losing the weight to treat the underlying cause, hopefully. But what if apnea isn't your problem? What if you just have trouble falling asleep or staying asleep? In my book How Not to Diet, I have a whole section on sleep enhancement, where I go through the four rules of sleep conditioning, the four rules of sleep hygiene. What if you fall those guidelines, but still can't get to sleep? Any natural dietary remedies? I already have videos on using kiwifruit to fight insomnia and tart cherries too. Are there any vegetables that might help? Lactuca sativa is a plant that has been traditionally used in the treatment of insomnia. What is this exotic-sounding leafy vegetable? Lettuce. Evidently, lettuce extracts have been used from the time of the Roman Empire, as agents with sedative and sleep-inducing properties. Lettuce actually does have a hypnotic substance in it called lactucin, which is what makes lettuce taste a little bitter. But you don't know if it actually works until you put it to the test, and it works in toads. But it also works in rodents. Sleep in both mice and rats is enhanced by romaine lettuce. They used romaine since it has a higher lactucin content compared to other lettuces. Okay, but does it work in people? About 10 years ago, a study was published in which insomnia sufferers were randomized to receive lettuce seed oil, oil extracted from lettuce seeds. Within a week, about 70% of those in the lettuce seed oil group said their insomnia very much or much improved compared to only 20% in the placebo control group. The researchers concluded that lettuce seed oil was found to be a useful, safe sleeping aid in geriatric patients suffering from sleeping difficulties. They chose to study older individuals because insomnia affects surprisingly 20 to 40% of older adults, at least a few nights a month. You think that's bad? Sleep disturbances can plague as many as nearly 8 out of 10 women during pregnancy. Of course, there's lots of different sleeping pills, but they may endanger the fetus or mother. For example, doctors frequently prescribe ambient for pregnant women who have trouble sleeping, but ambient use is associated with a wide range of adverse pregnancy outcomes, like low birth weight babies, premature birth, and cesarean section. And the use of valium during pregnancy has been linked to birth defects, including limb deficiencies. There has to be a better way. What about trying lettuce? The lettuce oil study had a number of limitations. For example, it was only single blind, being the researchers knew who was on the lettuce supplements and who was on placebo, which could have introduced some bias, but the researchers essentially said, give us a break, right? Big Pharma has billions to spend on research, and no one wants to fund studies on lettuce. Finally, we got a double blind, placebo-controlled study, but this time on a whole food, not just a lettuce seed extract. Yeah, but how do you come up with a placebo lettuce? How are you going to hide who gets lettuce and who doesn't? Well, you can't fit ahead of lettuce into a capsule, but you can fit whole lettuce seeds. And here we go. A double blind randomized placebo-controlled trial on lettuce seeds for pregnancy-related insomnia. 100 pregnant women with insomnia were randomized to receive capsules, containing either a quarter teaspoon of ground lettuce seeds or a placebo for two weeks. And those on the lettuce seeds saw a significant improvement in a sleep quality index score compared to the placebo, with no reported side effects. We would love it if you could share with us your stories about reinventing your health through evidence-based nutrition, goodnutritionfacts.org slash testimonials. We may share it on social media to help inspire others. Scenic graphs, charts, graphics, images, or studies mentioned here, please go to the Nutrition Facts Podcast landing page there you'll find all the detailed information you need, plus links to all the sources we cite for each of these topics. My last two books are How to Survive a Pandemic and the How Not to Diet Cookbook. Stay tuned for December 5, 2023, for the launch of my new one, How Not to Age. And of course, all the proceeds I received from the sales of all my books goes directly to charity. NutritionFacts.org is a non-profit science-based public service where you can sign up for free daily updates on the latest in nutrition research. We have bite-sized videos and articles. Everything on the website is free. There are no ads, no corporate sponsorships, no kickbacks, strictly non-commercial, not selling anything. I just put up as public service as a labor of love as a tribute to my grandmother, whose own life was saved with evidence-based nutrition.