Eating in the middle of the night makes you fat. We know this from studies on the eating habits of fat people and dieticians' work. Sleep researchers at Northwestern University published their findings from an
animal study, which make it clear why eating during the part of the day when you are usually asleep makes you so fat.
The researchers experimented with male mice, placing them for 12 hours a day in the dark and 12 hours in the light. Mice are nocturnal animals and therefore active at night. We, the strange bipeds that call themselves Homo sapiens, are daytime animals.
Normally speaking, mice eat at night and we eat during the daytime. But technological innovations such as the electric lamp, TV, deep freeze pizza and microwaves have changed our eating habits. More and more people are eating more frequently during the late evening and night. The researchers were curious whether this unnatural eating pattern is related to the obesity epidemic.
C57BL/6J-muis
The researchers devised an experiment with 17 C57BL/6J mice. There's a photo of one below. The researchers gave one group of these mice food only when it was light [light-fed], and another group food only when it was dark [Dark-fed]. The mice were given food that had a high fat content. This kind of food fattens rodents fast.
The figure below shows that the mice with the 'unnatural' eating pattern [Light-fed] gained more weight than the mice in the other group.
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