Sleepiness makes fatty foods extra tempting

Jill Chen / Getty Images stock

Sleepyheads, please refrain from licking your monitor.

Slacking off on shuteye could make it harder for you to resist high-calorie treats and fattening foods, new research found.

Feeling drowsier during the day because you didn't catch enough ZZZs at night may make it easier for you to give in to temptation, suggests a preliminary study to be presented at the 2011 meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.

In this small study of 12 healthy adults, ages 19 to 45, participants were shown photographs of low- or high-calorie foods over a four-minute period as images of their brains were scanned. Volunteers were told they would be given a memory test afterward to make them focus on the visuals.

Every few seconds new images would flash before participant's eyes including such healthy fare as salads, fresh fish, an apple or orange. They also saw more enticing edibles from strawberry cheesecake and french fries to cheeseburgers and chocolate cake. As a control, researchers sprinkled in shots of trees, rocks, and flowers.

Volunteers also completed questionnaires about how drowsy they were during the day as well as their food likes and dislikes and typical eating habits.

Scientists found that "the sleepier you are, the less the prefrontal cortex -- the inhibitory area of the brain -- is activated when it's shown high-calorie foods," says William Killgore, an assistant professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School and McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass.

In other words, if you've skimped on sleep, you're less likely to put on the brakes when you're around fattening foods. And you're more likely to reach out and grab that bacon double cheeseburger or dig into a pint of Chunky Monkey.

In the research, participants were not chronically sleep-deprived. They had the usual tiredness that comes from staying up past their bedtime by an hour or two a night. Even this was strongly correlated with less activation in the inhibitory areas of the brain when shown calorie-rich foods.

When you don't get the rest you need, "you might not have the ability to say no to that extra cookie or dessert," points out Killgore, and you're a little more likely to take in a few extra calories a day.

"Even subtle changes in sleep could be having larger effects in ways we hadn't considered, such as appetite, body weight, and food choices," explains Killgore. A little bit of sleep loss adds up and may influence your body shape. 

"It's entirely plausible that with less inhibitory control, you reach for less optimal foods, and this may lead to a lot more weight over a lifetime," Killgore says.

And a fatigue-induced lack of inhibition can extend to behaviors beside eating. Other studies have suggested that being sleep deprived affects a person's ability to plan and think ahead, and skews judgment when assessing risk.

When you're tired during the day, are you more likely to go for junk food?

Want more weird health news? Find The Body Odd on Facebook.

Discuss this post

"...as images of their were scanned" C'mon, MSNBC. Do a little proof-reading! I'm sure you meant to say "as images of their brains were scanned"

    Reply#1 - Mon Jun 13, 2011 12:11 PM EDT

    You're right! Apparently, we're sleepy this Monday morning. No wonder that chocolate cake at the top of the page looks so delicious.

    Thanks!

    • 2 votes
    #1.1 - Mon Jun 13, 2011 12:20 PM EDT
    Reply

    yummm@ pic above!!

      Reply#2 - Mon Jun 13, 2011 1:01 PM EDT

       I work nights at a hospital and I just read this article while at work while debating on whether or not to order some breadsticks to keep me going.  Thanks a lot MSNBC you laid on the guilt.

        Reply#3 - Mon Jun 13, 2011 10:36 PM EDT

        This makes a lot of sense...ever since I had my son 5 months ago I seem to have lost my food inhibitions entirely, and I'm definitely not getting as much sleep as I need! I seriously find myself eating chocolate in the middle of the night after I get up to feed him and I don't even realize what I'm doing.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#4 - Tue Jun 14, 2011 1:16 AM EDT

        True, True and True!! I was suffering from low Seritonin levels and never got any sleep...I used to eat fatty foods and junk to keep awake....Dr. Put me on meds...Now I lost 20lbs!..My desire for fatty foods has decreased tremendously!!

          Reply#6 - Tue Jun 14, 2011 8:23 AM EDT

          bobbyfagen14 banned, spamming samples.

          • 3 votes
          #6.1 - Tue Jun 14, 2011 12:46 PM EDT
          Reply

          Absolutely dead on, crave crunchy almonds or any other nut if I have them, usually about 10 minutes of REM sleep, startle awake, handful of almonds and settle back in, missing about 2 hours of sleep a night.

            Reply#7 - Tue Jun 14, 2011 9:11 AM EDT

            The title of the article is misleading. The cake and sweets are mostly sugar not fat. Fat will not make you fat but sugar will.

              Reply#8 - Tue Jun 14, 2011 11:09 AM EDT

              yes!! absolutely. this whole article just reminds me of my college years...

                Reply#9 - Fri Jun 17, 2011 8:39 AM EDT
                You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
                As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.