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    Home»Weight Loss»Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight
    Weight Loss

    Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight

    healthylife7By healthylife7July 13, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight
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    Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight

    Date:
    July 13, 2026
    Source:
    Columbia University Irving Medical Center
    Summary:
    Sleeping about an hour and 20 minutes less each night for six weeks caused participants to gain weight and spend more time inactive. Researchers found that even mild, realistic sleep loss, similar to what many adults experience, had measurable effects. They warn that if this pattern continues over months or years, the health consequences could become much more significant, including a higher risk of diabetes and heart disease.
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    FULL STORY

    Getting a little less sleep each night may have a bigger impact on your health than you realize. Researchers at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons found that adults who cut their nightly sleep by about 80 minutes for six weeks gained an average of one pound and spent more time being inactive

    The findings add to growing evidence that consistently getting enough sleep may play an important role in preventing weight gain and lowering the risk of obesity related diseases

    “Our study shows that getting adequate sleep may help reduce the risk of weight gain and obesity-related conditions like heart disease and diabetes,” says Marie-Pierre St-Onge, a professor of nutritional medicine in Columbia’s Department of Medicine and Institute for Human Nutrition and study leader. “People tend to gain weight over the course of their adulthood, and obesity is a major risk factor for heart disease. But focusing on eating a healthier diet and getting more physical activity to offset weight gain is simplistic and can be difficult to maintain.”

    Looking Beyond Extreme Sleep Deprivation

    Much of the previous research connecting poor sleep with obesity has focused on severe sleep deprivation, often limiting people to only four hours of sleep. Those studies have shown that extreme sleep loss can increase appetite and overeating, factors that contribute to weight gain

    However, such severe sleep restriction is difficult for most people to tolerate for more than a few days

    “These studies only show us what happens under the most extreme conditions and don’t tell us if mildly sleep-deprived people, like a lot of Americans who get 5 or 6 hours of sleep a night, will gain weight,” St-Onge says

    To better reflect real life, the researchers examined the effects of chronic, mild sleep loss, a pattern experienced by roughly 30% of adults

    Six Weeks of Less Sleep Led to Measurable Changes

    The study included 95 adults who normally slept between 7 and 8 hours each night. During one six week study period, participants delayed their usual bedtime by 90 minutes. During another six week period, they followed their normal sleep schedule

    Throughout both phases, participants wore wrist monitors that tracked sleep and physical activity. Researchers also measured body weight, waist circumference, body composition, and fasting levels of several hormones involved in appetite regulation

    “While the one-pound weight gain observed with modest sleep curtailment is not overwhelming, it is important to remember this is occurring over just six weeks,” says Faris Zuraikat, assistant professor of nutritional medicine in Columbia’s Department of Medicine and Institute for Human Nutrition and first author of the study. “Our study was designed to mimic sleep patterns that most adults experience chronically. When extrapolated to a full year, we would expect that losing less than an hour and a half of sleep per night could result in clinically meaningful weight gain.”

    Less Sleep Also Meant More Sitting

    The researchers found that participants became less active during the sleep restriction phase. On average, sedentary time increased by 17 minutes per day. Among men and postmenopausal women, inactivity rose by nearly 30 minutes each day

    “Even when we accounted for the fact that they were awake longer when sleep was shortened, participants spent more time being inactive than when they got adequate sleep,” Zuraikat says. “This is notable, as people who are more sedentary have elevated risk for chronic diseases.”

    Earlier Research Suggests Broader Health Effects

    The same group of participants has also been examined in related studies. In one previous investigation, women with increased cardiometabolic risk who reduced their sleep by about 80 minutes each night for six weeks developed greater insulin resistance, an important risk factor for type 2 diabetes. The effect was especially pronounced in postmenopausal women

    Another study found that men and women with elevated heart disease risk developed an influx of inflammatory cells in the heart after experiencing mild sleep restriction

    “Though more research is needed to further understand how sleep restriction leads to weight gain, all of our findings suggest that insufficient sleep increases the risk of obesity-related conditions like type 2 diabetes and heart disease,” St-Onge says

    “Now we need to understand the health effects of improving sleep in those who fail to get adequate sleep on a regular basis.”

    The study, titled “Skimping on Sleep and Its Impact on Body Weight and Composition: A Pooled Analysis of Randomized Trials,” was published on July 6 in Annals of Internal Medicine

    The authors are Faris Zuraikat, Samantha Scaccia, Justin Cochran, Bin Cheng, Keith Diaz, Seth Creasy (University of Colorado), Brooke Aggarwal, Sanja Jelic, and Marie-Pierre St-Onge

    The authors report no conflicts of interest

    The research was supported by the American Heart Association (16SFRN27950012) and the National Institutes of Health (R01 HL128226, UL1 TR001873, P30 DK026687, R01 HL173190, R01 HL155190, R01 HL153642, K01 HL145023, R01 HL169991, R01 HL106041, R35 HL155670, R01 AG071032, R56 DK136601, P30 DK048520, and R01 DK128154)

    Materials provided by Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Note: Content may be edited for style and length

    Journal Reference:

    1. Faris M. Zuraikat, Samantha E. Scaccia, Justin A. Cochran, Bin Cheng, Keith M. Diaz, Seth A. Creasy, Edward L. Melanson, Wei Shen, Brooke Aggarwal, Sanja Jelic, Marie-Pierre St-Onge. Prolonged Short Sleep and Its Effect on Body Weight and Composition. Annals of Internal Medicine, 2026; DOI: 10.7326/ANNALS-25-01660

    Cite This Page:

    Columbia University Irving Medical Center. “Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 13 July 2026. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/07/260713000800.htm>.
    Columbia University Irving Medical Center. (2026, July 13). Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 13, 2026 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/07/260713000800.htm
    Columbia University Irving Medical Center. “Losing just 80 minutes of sleep a night could make you gain weight.” ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/07/260713000800.htm (accessed July 13, 2026).
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