Night owls may have a higher risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes than early risers
Northumbria University
Night owls may have a higher risk of
suffering from heart disease and type 2 diabetes than early risers.
In the first ever international
review of studies analysing whether being an early riser or a night owl can
influence your health, researchers have uncovered a growing body of evidence
indicating an increased risk of ill health in people with an evening preference
as they have more erratic eating patterns and consume more unhealthy foods.
The findings have been reported
in Advances in Nutrition Friday, 30 November.
The human body runs on a 24-hour
cycle which is regulated by our internal clock, which is known as a circadian
rhythm, or chronotype.
This internal clock regulates many physical functions, such as telling you when to eat, sleep and wake. An individual's chronotype leads to people having a natural preference towards waking early or going to bed late.
This internal clock regulates many physical functions, such as telling you when to eat, sleep and wake. An individual's chronotype leads to people having a natural preference towards waking early or going to bed late.
The researchers found increasing
evidence emerging from studies linking conditions such as heart disease and
type 2 diabetes to people with the evening chronotype -- a natural preference
for evenings.
People who go to bed later tend to have unhealthier diets, consuming more alcohol, sugars, caffeinated drinks and fast food than early risers.
They consistently report more erratic eating patterns as they miss breakfast and eat later in the day.
Their diet contains less grains, rye and vegetables and they eat fewer, but larger, meals.
They also report higher levels of consumption of caffeinated beverages, sugar and snacks, than those with a morning preference, who eat slightly more fruit and vegetables per day.
This potentially explains why night owls have a higher risk of suffering from chronic disease.
Eating late in the day was also
found to be linked to an increased risk of type 2 diabetes because the
circadian rhythm influences the way glucose is metabolised in in the body.
Glucose levels should naturally
decline throughout the day and reach their lowest point at night.
However, as night owls often eat shortly before bed, their glucose levels are increased when they are about to sleep. This could negatively affect metabolism as their body isn't following its normal biological process.
However, as night owls often eat shortly before bed, their glucose levels are increased when they are about to sleep. This could negatively affect metabolism as their body isn't following its normal biological process.
One study showed that people with an
evening preference were 2.5 times more likely to have type 2 diabetes than
those with a morning preference.
This also impacts on people who work
shifts -- particularly rotating shifts -- as they are constantly adjusting
their body clock to fit with their working hours. The researchers found that
this reduces their sensitivity to insulin and affects their glucose tolerance,
putting them at greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
The review also uncovered
interesting trends:
People's preferences to rising early
and going to bed later change at varying points in the life cycle.
The morning chronotype is more common in children and can appear when a baby is just three-weeks old.
This changes during childhood. While over 90% of two-year-olds have a morning preference, this declines to 58% by the age of six, and shifts further towards an evening preference during puberty.
This evening preference continues until an adult reaches their early 50's and they then begin to revert back to a morning preference.
The morning chronotype is more common in children and can appear when a baby is just three-weeks old.
This changes during childhood. While over 90% of two-year-olds have a morning preference, this declines to 58% by the age of six, and shifts further towards an evening preference during puberty.
This evening preference continues until an adult reaches their early 50's and they then begin to revert back to a morning preference.
Ethnicity and society can also
influence your chronotype. For example, studies have revealed that Germans are
more likely to have an evening preference in comparison to Indians and Slovakians.
There can also be differences between people living in urban and rural areas in the same country.
There can also be differences between people living in urban and rural areas in the same country.
Another study noted that being exposed to daylight influenced sleep. Every additional hour spent outdoors was associated with 30 minutes of 'advance sleep' and that the noise, ambient lighting and crowding of urban environments can make people in some areas more likely to have a morning or evening preference.
The researchers also found evidence
that night owls would accumulate 'sleep debt' during the working week and would
sleep longer at weekends to compensate for this, whereas early birds had
smaller differences in their sleeping patterns across the week.
Dr Almoosawi, a Research Fellow in
Northumbria's Brain, Performance and Nutrition Research Centre, explained:
"We have found that your genes, ethnicity and gender determine the
likelihood of you being a morning or evening type. In adulthood, being an
evening chronotype is associated with greater risk of heart disease and type 2
diabetes, and this may be potentially due to the poorer eating behaviour and
diet of people with evening chronotype. Our review also found that people who
have a poorer control of their diabetes are more likely to be evening types.
"The review has highlighted a
major gap in our understanding as to how our biological clock affects food
intake in infants, children and the elderly. While most infants synchronise
their body clock to that of their mothers, as they reach six-years of age, we
observe that a large proportion begin to show signs of developing an evening
chronotype. Whether physiological changes, school timings or social schedules
determine this change, we do not know.
Dr Almoosawi added: "In
teenagers, we also find that evening chronotype is related to more erratic
eating behaviour and poorer diet. This could have important implications to
health in adulthood as most dietary habits are established in
adolescence."
The review team have called for more
studies in the general population that define people's body clock and how this
relates in the long-term to their dietary habits and health.
Dr Leonidas G Karagounis of Nestle
Health Science, said: "Scientific evidence is providing increasing insight
into the relationship between your chronotype, diet and cardiometabolic health.
Overall, cross-sectional studies suggest that an evening chronotype is associated with lower intake of fruits and vegetables, and higher intake of energy drinks, alcoholic, sugary and caffeinated beverages, as well as higher energy intake from fat.
Overall, cross-sectional studies suggest that an evening chronotype is associated with lower intake of fruits and vegetables, and higher intake of energy drinks, alcoholic, sugary and caffeinated beverages, as well as higher energy intake from fat.
"Further research on the best
methods to assess an individual's chronotype and how this may affect their
long-term cardiometabolic health can potentially guide the development of
health promotion strategies aimed at preventing and treating chronic diseases
based on an individual's chronotype."