Sleep Deprivation- Food Purchasing
the Next Day increase
Sleep Deprivation Increases Food
Purchasing the Next Day
Sep. 5, 2013 — People who were deprived of one night's sleep purchased more calories
and grams of food in a mock supermarket on the following day in a new
study published in the journal Obesity, the official journal of The Obesity
Society. Sleep deprivation
also led to increased blood levels of ghrelin, a hormone that increases hunger, on the
following morning; however, there was no correlation between individual ghrelin
levels and food purchasing, suggesting that other mechanisms -- such as
impulsive decision making -- may be more responsible for
increased purchasing.
Researchers in Sweden were curious as to whether sleep
deprivation may impair or alter an individual's food purchasing choices based
on its established tendency to impair higher-level thinking and to increase hunger.
"We hypothesized that sleep deprivation's impact on
hunger and decision making would make for the 'perfect storm' with regard to
shopping and food purchasing -- leaving individuals hungrier and less capable
of employing self-control and higher-level decision-making processes to avoid
making impulsive, calorie-driven purchases," said first author Colin
Chapman, MSc, of Uppsala University.
On the morning after one night of total sleep deprivation,
as well as after one night of sleep, Chapman, along with Christian Benedict,
PhD, and their colleagues, gave 14 normal-weight men a fixed budget
(approximately $50). The men were instructed to purchase as much as they could
out of a possible 40 items, including 20 high-caloric foods and 20 low-calorie
foods. The prices of the high-caloric foods were then varied to determine if
total sleep deprivation affects the flexibility of food purchasing. Before
the task, participants received a standardized breakfast to
minimize the effect of hunger on their purchases.
Sleep-deprived men purchased significantly more calories
(+9%) and grams (+18%) of food than they did after one night of sleep. The
researchers also measured blood levels of ghrelin, finding that the hormone's concentrations
were higher after total
sleep deprivation; however, this increase did not correlate with food
purchasing behavior.
"Our finding provides a strong rationale for suggesting
that patients with concerns regarding caloric intake and weight gain maintain a
healthy, normal sleep schedule," said Chapman.
Follow up studies are needed to address whether these sleep
deprivation-induced changes in food purchasing behavior also exist under
partial sleep deprivation, though.
Additional research should also look into sleep
deprivation's potential impact on purchasing behavior in general, as it may
lead to impaired or impulsive purchasing in a variety of other contexts.
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