A study in the journal Sleep in which participants were put on normal sleep or sleep-restricted schedules while their calories were carefully monitored. ¡¶Ë¯Ãß¡·ÆÚ¿¯ÖмǼÁËÒ»ÏîʵÑ飬²ÎÓëÕ߷ֱ𱻷ֵ½Õý³£Ë¯Ãß×éºÍÏÞÖÆÐÔ˯Ãß×飬²¢ÇÒÏêϸ¼à²âÁËËûÃÇÌåÄڵĿ¨Â·Àï¡£
Allison reports:The new study, based on blood samples, documents a novel finding: The daily rhythm of a particular endocannabinoid is altered by a lack of sleep. °¢ÀïÉ˵ÕâÒ»»ùÓÚѪҺÊÔÑùµÄÑо¿Ö¤Ã÷ÁËÒ»¸öеķ¢ÏÖ£ºÈËÌåÄڵĻ¨ÉúËÄÏ©Ëá¸ÊÓ͵ĺ¬Á¿»áÒòȱ·¦Ë¯Ã߶ø¸Ä±ä¡£
And these changes ¡°could be driving intake for more palatable foods,¡± Erin Hanlon, a neuroscientist at the University of Chicago Medical Center, told us. ¡°¶øÕâЩ±ä»¯¾ÍÊÇÇýʹÈ˶ÔÃÀʳÏòÍùµÄÔªÐס£¡±Ö¥¼Ó¸çÒ½ÁÆÖÐÐÄ´óѧµÄÉñ¾ÏµÍ³¿Æѧ¼Ò°¬ÈðÉ?ººÁú¸æËßÎÒÃÇ¡£ ¡°We found that sleep restriction boosts a signal that may increase the hedonic aspect of food intake,¡± says Hanlon. ººÁú˵£¬È±·¦Ë¯Ãß»á´ÙʹÈËÃÇÔö¼Ó¶ÔÃÀζʳÎïµÄÏíÊÜ¡£ In other words, being sleep deprived may produce a stronger desire to eat. »»ÑÔÖ®£¬Ë¯Ãß²»ºÃ»áÈÃÈ˸ü¼ÓÏë³Ô¶«Î÷¡£ We¡¯re still a long way from understanding the connections between sleeplessness, stress, and, well, gluttony. »òÐíÎÒÃÇÉÐδÑо¿Çå³þ˯Ãß¡¢Ñ¹Á¦ÒÔ¼°±©Òû±©Ê³Ö®¼äµÄ¹Øϵ¡£ But knowing that the ¡°sleep munchies¡± are probably a real thing with an explainable physical cause can only help those of us trying to improve our droopy-eyed eating habits. µ«Á˽â˯ǰ¼¢¶ö¸ÐµÄÔÒòÖÁÉÙ¿ÉÒÔ°ïÖúÎÒÃǸÄÉÆ˯ÑÛÐÊâ컹µÃ³Ô¶«Î÷µÄÏ°¹ß¡£
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