Nov 4, 2007 9:50 am US/Eastern
Study Finds Less Sleep May Lead To Fatter Kids
CHICAGO (CBS News) ―
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A study found the less sleep third-graders got, the more likely they were to be obese in sixth grade. (File)
CBS
Now there's another reason to get children to bed early: More sleep might lower their risk of becoming obese.
Researchers have found that every additional hour per night a
third-grader spends sleeping reduces the child's chances of being obese
in sixth grade by 40 percent. Third graders are usually around 8 or 9
years old; sixth graders are around 11 or 12.
The less sleep they got, the more likely the children were to be
obese in sixth grade, no matter what the child's weight was in third
grade, said Dr. Julie Lumeng of the University of Michigan, who led the
research.
If there was a magic number for the third-graders, it was nine
hours, 45 minutes of sleep. Sleeping more than that lowered the risk
significantly.
The study gives parents one more reason to enforce bedtimes,
restrict caffeine and yank the TV from the bedroom. The study appears
in the November issue of the journal Pediatrics.
"Specifically for every hour of sleep that you get in third grade,
every additional hour, your risk of obesity in sixth grade decreases by
40 percent," the study's lead author, Dr. Julie Lumeng, told
CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes.
Lack of sleep plays havoc with two hormones that are the "yin and
yang of appetite regulation," said endocrinologist Eve Van Cauter of
the University of Chicago, who was not involved in the new study.
In experiments by Van Cauter and others, sleep-deprived adults
produced more ghrelin, a hormone that promotes hunger, and less leptin,
a hormone that signals fullness.
Another explanation: Tired kids are less likely to exercise and more likely to sit on the couch and eat cookies, Lumeng said.
Dr. Stephen Sheldon, director of sleep medicine at Chicago's
Children's Memorial Hospital, praised the study and called for more
research. He said children's sleep may be disturbed by breathing
problems - some caused by overweight, such as sleep apnea, and some
caused by enlarged tonsils and adenoids.
"I'm not so sure we have enough information yet on cause and effect," said Sheldon, who was not involved in the study.
Tired kids face a host of other problems,
Hughes reports.
They're less likely to exercise and "can become hyperactive and can
have difficulty attending to things," Dr. Matthew R. Ebben from the
Sleep Center at Columbia University told
CBS News.
Researchers used data from an existing federal study and focused on
785 children with complete information on sleep, and height and weight
in the third grade and sixth grade. The children lived in 10 U.S.
cities.
Mothers were asked: "How much sleep does your child get each day
(including naps)?" On average, the third-graders got about 9½ hours
sleep, but some slept as little as seven hours and others as much as 12
hours.
Of the children who slept 10 to 12 hours a day, about 12 percent
were obese by sixth grade. Many more - 22 percent - were obese in sixth
grade of those who slept less than nine hours a day.
The researchers took into account other risk factors for obesity,
such as the children's body mass index in third grade, and still found
the link between less sleep in third grade and obesity in sixth grade.
They acknowledged that factors they did not account for, such as
parents' weight or behavior, may have contributed to the risk.
Jodi Mindell of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's Sleep
Center noted there are plenty of other reasons for encouraging good
sleep habits, such as success in school.
"I don't want parents to think, 'If I get her to sleep, she's not
going to be overweight,"' Mindell said. "I think this is a small piece
in the picture."
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