Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sleep. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Princess Health and Obesity and depression may contribute to daytime sleepiness.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Obesity and depression may contribute to daytime sleepiness.Princessiccia

Obesity and depression, not just lack of sleep, contribute to daytime drowsiness, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers. Daytime drowsiness or sleepiness affects up to 30 percent of the U.S. population. It can reduce work productivity and cause car accidents. According to the States of Obesity report, 33.2 percent of Kentucky adults are obese.

The Penn State study used physiologic sleep data to show a connection between obesity and depression or sleepiness. Study participants filled out a comprehensive sleep history and physical examination and were evaluated in a sleep laboratory. "Obesity and weight gain predicted who was going to have daytime sleepiness," said Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, assistant professor of psychiatry at the Sleep Research and Treatment Center. "Weight loss predicted who was going to stop experiencing daytime sleepiness, reinforcing the causal relationship."

Body mass index and sleepiness association was independent of sleep duration, so obese people might be sleepy during the day regardless of how much sleep they get. Obesity is also associated with sleep apnea. The chief reason heavy people are more tired is that fat cells create immune compounds called cytokines that make one sleepy.

According to the study, depressed people have daytime drowsiness because they have trouble falling asleep and often wake up during the night. "The mechanism that we believe is playing a role here is hyperarousal, which is simply going to bed and being to alert; in other words, people with depression feel fatigued but do not necessarily fall asleep during the day, Fernandez-Mendoza said.

The study showed that a one-size-fits-all method for treating daytime drowsiness will not be effective. Daytime sleepiness doesn't always mean a person doesn't get enough sleep, Fernandez-Mendoza said. "The main causes of a sleepy society are an obese society, a depressed society and, to some extent, people who have a physiological disorder. By looking at our patients more closely, we can start personalizing sleep medicine."

Friday, 4 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andStudy says children who have less screen time show benefits in all areas of their lives, though not immediately.Princessiccia

It's hard enough for parents to set expectations for children when everyone can see an immediate result, like a clean room or a grade; it is even harder to set expectations for children when it takes months to see the outcome, like the benefits that come from limiting screen time.

A study by Iowa State University, published in JAMA Pediatrics, says reducing the amount of time children spend on the computer or in front of the TV, as well as monitoring content, will help them sleep more, do better in school, behave better and lower the risk of obesity. But these results don't happen immediately, making it hard for parents and kids to buy into decreasing screen time, reports Newswise, a research-reporting service.

The study suggests parents find a healthy balance with screen time. The American Association of Pediatrics recommends that children under 2 not watch any television, and that older children have no more than one or two hours of screen time a day.

Fifty-six percent of children in Kentucky spend more than two hours a day playing video games, watching television, videos or DVDs, or on the computer, according to a 2012 survey of parents by the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky. The children in the Iowa study averaged more than 40 hours of screen time a week, not counting time spent on a computer at school.

The study analyzed the media habits of more than 1,300 school-aged children who were recruited to participate in an obesity prevention program. Students and parents were surveyed about screen time, exposure to violent media, bedtime and behavior. Teachers reported grades and commented on student behavior. School nurses measured student's height and weight. Data were collected at the start of the program and seven months later at the end of the program and collective patterns were identified.

KidsHealth.org makes these suggestions to create good TV habits in your home:
1. Limit TV-watching hours
2. Put other things to do in the TV room:  books, kids' magazines, toys, puzzles, games
3. Keep TVs and internet connections out of the bedrooms
4. Turn the TV off during meals
5. Don't allow kids to watch TV while doing homework
6. Treat TV as a privilege to be earned
7. Establish and enforce family TV viewing rules
8. Record and watch only the shows you want your kids to watch

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Princess Health and Sleep and Genetic Obesity Risk. Princessiccia

Princess Health and Sleep and Genetic Obesity Risk. Princessiccia

Evidence is steadily accumulating that insufficient sleep increases the risk of obesity and undermines fat loss efforts. Short sleep duration is one of the most significant risk factors for obesity (1), and several potential mechanisms have been identified, including increased hunger, increased interest in calorie-dense highly palatable food, reduced drive to exercise, and alterations in hormones that influence appetite and body fatness. Dan Pardi presented his research at AHS13 showing that sleep restriction reduces willpower to make healthy choices about food.

We also know that genetics has an outsized influence on obesity risk, accounting for about 70 percent of the variability in body fatness between people in affluent nations (2). I have argued that "fat genes" don't directly lead to obesity, but they do determine who is susceptible to a fattening environment and who isn't (3). I recently revisited a 2010 paper published in the journal Sleep by University of Washington researchers that supports this idea (4).

Read more �

Thursday, 31 January 2013

Princess Health and Small steps can prevent Kentucky's No. 1 killer, heart disease.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Small steps can prevent Kentucky's No. 1 killer, heart disease.Princessiccia

It is now February, which is American Heart Month and a perfect time to remind people that small steps can reduce their risk of heart disease, Kentucky's No. 1 killer.

You may be surprised to hear that almost 80 percent of heart disease is preventable and there are daily things that can be done to keep hearts healthy, according Dr. Martha Grogan, medical editor-in-chief of Mayo Clinic Healthy Heart for Life.

For example, try to move 10 extra minutes each day, Recent research shows a sedentary lifestyle may increase your risk of heart attack almost as much as smoking, said Grogan.

Each day, make an effort to get up from your desk to go talk to a colleague instead of sending an email, or walk around the house as you are talking on the phone, she recommends: �Moving even 10 minutes a day for someone who�s been sedentary may reduce the risk for heart disease by 50 percent.�

Hearts are also hurt when you deprive yourself of sleep, which is a necessity like food and water, said Virend Somers, a Mayo cardiologist and sleep expert. Chronic sleep deprivation can increase the risk of obesity, high blood pressure, heart attack, diabetes and depression.

Healthy habits can reduce a majority of risks for heart attack. "A 53-year-old male smoker with high blood pressure has a 20 percent chance of having a heart attack over the next 10 years. If he stops smoking, his risk drops to 10 percent; if he takes high blood pressure medicine, it falls to 5 percent," says preventive cardiologist Randal Thomas, M.D.

These healthy habits and changes like quitting smoking and taking blood pressure medicine can make a difference in life and death. For more from the Mayo Clinic, click here; for a American Heart Month information from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, go here.