this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2024
94 points (91.2% liked)

Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related

2350 readers
370 users here now

Health: physical and mental, individual and public.

Discussions, issues, resources, news, everything.

See the pinned post for a long list of other communities dedicated to health or specific diagnoses. The list is continuously updated.

Nothing here shall be taken as medical or any other kind of professional advice.

Commercial advertising is considered spam and not allowed. If you're not sure, contact mods to ask beforehand.

Linked videos without original description context by OP to initiate healthy, constructive discussions will be removed.

Regular rules of lemmy.world apply. Be civil.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

A study suggests eating later in the day can directly impact our biological weight regulation in three key ways: through the number of calories that we burn; our hunger levels; and the way our bodies store fat.

With obesity now affecting hundreds of millions of people worldwide, this is a valuable insight into how the risk of becoming obese could be lowered in a relatively simple way โ€“ just by eating our meals a few hours earlier.

Earlier studies had already identified a link between the timing of meals and weight gain, but here the researchers wanted to look at that link more closely, as well as teasing out the biological reasons behind it.

"We wanted to test the mechanisms that may explain why late eating increases obesity risk," said neuroscientist Frank Scheer, from Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston in 2022 when the study was published.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] [email protected] 12 points 10 months ago

I think people who obsess over calorie in calorie out reasoning drastically underestimate how variable the calorie out side can be with factors that aren't exercise. Digestion isn't 100% efficient, some calories are excreted. Small changes in body temperature have large changes in total energy consumption. Sleep quality, time awake, base heart rate and respiration rate, etc. all vary and have impacts on energy usage.

Parroting CICO sounds scientific because it borrows credibility from thermodynamics, but people aren't closed systems and applying laws of thermodynamics takes a lot of nuance in complex systems with a variety of inputs and outputs.