Your Health Is Affected Not Only By What You Eat, But Also When You Eat It

in #health7 years ago (edited)

Lets take a trip back in time a few years to 2015 and discuss a research article published in the journal PLoS One titled "Frequency and Circadian Timing of Eating May Influence Biomarkers of Inflammation and Insulin Resistance Associated with Breast Cancer Risk."

In this article the authors were exploring a relationship between how often we eat, how many night-time calories we eat and the likelihood of cancer (which in this study was breast cancer). At first glance one might say... how can that possibly be related. Well let us dive into the research presented in this article and gain a better understanding!

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Relationship Between Timing Of Eating and Cancer?

You are likely familiar with inflammation in the context of a rash but it can take many forms, some not visible

Cancer, often times we think of this as one monolithic disease, however it's actually a blanket term for a variety of different but related disorders that all center around uncontrolled cellular division and growth. How could this set of diseases be related to when we eat? Well the answer to that question potentially lies in inflammation. Inflammation is, if you really boil it down, just our body turning up our immune system functioning. It can occur for a variety of reasons (like a virus, or bacterial infection, or an allergen).

There is a growing body of literature which has been linking cancer, in part, to low levels of inflammation in the body. [3] Inflammation is a common symptom of a variety of other disorders which ARE linked to cancer (Diabetes for example). [4] Where the authors of today's article site previous lab work showing that tumors generally form in cells of a tissue that are inflamed. [5]. Further more, still other studies have shown a relationship between a protein called a c-reactive protein, which is a marker for inflammation, and breast cancer. [6]

A Humans Sleep Wake Cycle or "Biological Clock"

Most of you are likely aware that inflammation is influenced by the things we eat, but that is not the topic of discussion for today. Today we are taking a look at the effect WHEN we eat has on our bodies. It may surprise some of you but there is precedent in the literature from animal studies that show differing levels of inflammation relating to how many of times an animal ate throughout the day.[8] The researchers found that by placing the animals on a feeding-fasting regimen (IE only eating for an 8 hour window during the day, and fasting the remainder of the time). It was also shown that mice seemed most effective when synchronized with the animals sleep wake cycle (having the 8 hour window for eating when the animal was typically awake, rather than during a period when they would normally be sleeping). [9] Unfortunately the authors report that human studies do not seem to be able to replicate the information observed in the animal models. [11] (though perhaps newer research has changed this finding?)

What Were The Authors of Today's Study Looking At?

Data from a 2009-2010 nutrition survey done by the US National Center for Health Statistics. This study considered data from 2650 women who both extensively recorded their diets, as well as had a physical workup performed by a physician.

Using this data the authors looked at how the way those women ate influenced the bio-markers that were analyzed (fasting blood glucose, C-Reacive Protein levels). This allowed the authors to look for associations between diet (and WHEN/HOW OFTEN the women ate) and the aforementioned indicators for diabetes (blood glucose) and inflammation (C-Reactive Protein).

What Did They Observe?

On Average The Women:

  • Were 46.8 years old
  • Fasted for 12.4 hours per night
  • Ate 4.7 times per day

The authors reported some tests from their statistical analysis of the data and found that eating more times per day correlated to an increase in the amount of calories consumed in the evening (p< 0.001), and they found that increase in the night time fasting duration was inversely correlated (meaning if it went up then the other statistic went down) with night time calorie consumption (p< 0.001).

This all makes logical sense. (People who eat more times are more likely to eat in the evening, and fast for a shorter period of time)

They identified some interesting statistical relationships from the data as well:

  • Eating frequency was inversely correlated with C-Reactive Protein levels (one additional meal resulted in 8% Less C-Reactive Protein, p=0.03)
  • Eating 10% more calories at night resulted in a 3% increase in C-Reactive Protein levels (p = 0.02).
  • Women who ate fewer than 30% of their calories in the evening had LOWER C-Reactive Protein levels then those who ate more calories in the evening. (Each additional hour of fasting = 8% lower concentration of C-Reactive Protein)
    -None of the fasting information correlated with insulin resistance (in relation to blood glucose concentrations and diabetes).

What Conclusions Do They Draw From This/What Does This Indicate?

Evening calorie intake is associated with increased levels of inflammation (based on the relationship with the C-Reactive Protein, a bio-marker for inflammation). Interestingly the C-Reactive Protein is also a bio-marker for an increased risk of developing breast cancer.

The authors reported that the association between the C-Reactive Protein was independent of other lifestyle choices.

The authors suggest that this data is indicative that meal timing may result in the increased inflammation. They postulate that eating at the wrong time in the sleep wake cycle (later in the evening) could disrupt the sleep wake cycle and this may lead to increased inflammation.

Indeed, they report, there is some evidence in the literature that genes associated with inflammation are expressed more if the sleep wake cycle gets disturbed. [8].

They conclude that:

[The] results of this study suggest that reducing evening energy intake, eating more frequently, and fasting for longer nightly intervals (when fasting is initiated early in the evening) may reduce systemic inflammation in the body which could subsequently reduce breast cancer and chronic disease risk.

However they are careful not to make any BOLD claims and state that these associations require further study (randomized clinical trials) to truly show that changing meal frequency significantly influences inflammation. However if their data is eventually confirmed it would be strong evidence that it is a smart idea to limit the amount of calories we consume in the evening.

It's quite fascinating to me that there is such a relationship! What do you think about this? Are you surprised that eating in the evening could very well lead to greater inflammation and possible health issues?

Answering Our Title Image Question

Does eating more times per day reduce your chance of getting cancer? Possibly (there data shows a slight reduction in inflammation levels with increased number of meals). However eating more, later in the day may very well increase your chance. It seems that as is often the case with biology and our bodies. There is just a lot more to this, then one might initially expect.

Sources

Text Sources

  1. http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0136240
  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflammation
  3. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v420/n6917/full/nature01322.html
  4. http://www.jci.org/articles/view/JCI29069
  5. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11866137
  6. http://cancerpreventionresearch.aacrjournals.org/content/6/3/188
  7. https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/body-mind-spirit/heart/elevated-c-reactive-protein-crp/
  8. http://www.cell.com/cell-metabolism/fulltext/S1550-4131(12)00189-1
  9. https://academic.oup.com/nutritionreviews/article-abstract/72/5/308/1933482/Time-restricted-feeding-and-risk-of-metabolic
  10. https://sleepfoundation.org/sites/default/files/SleepWakeCycle.pdf
  11. http://jandonline.org/article/S2212-2672(15)00205-1/fulltext

Image Sources

  1. Image 1
  2. Image 1-2
  3. Image 2

All Non Cited Images Are From Pixabay.com, Flickr.com, Pexels.com, or Wikipedia.com And Are Available For Reuse Under Creative Commons Licenses

Any Gifs Are From Giphy.com and Are Also Available for Use Under Creative Commons Licences

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Awesome article, @justtryme90!

I really enjoyed it and learned something new. If this is the case, I have alot more reason to stay motivated when it comes to cutting down on nighttime eating. I really struggle with that.... especially when it comes to sweets. But thank u for giving me another reason to keep on trying :)

Thanks for reading! I am glad you found some extra motivation within. Limiting nighttime eating is something I struggle with myself.

Well unfortunately I tend to do the exact opposite of what this study recommends - eating infrequent giant meals, often in the evening... No question it makes me feel like crap - so this is another reason to change things up I guess..

@dber try plant based diet, it´s really helpful...

Bummer. Yeah you should probably change it up.

Great article...that mean the cancer will Attacked by disease not only with food but how to eat food...incredible this is new information to me thanks alot.

It's always fun to read your poste. Keep going

Thank you, I appreciate the encouragement.

Nice job. I like as works. Thanks for sharing

Thank you for reading :)

Woow great work @justtryme90 thank you for sharing and for the infomration

You are quite welcome, thank you for reading!

Is the takeaway that the increase in C-Reactive Protein, in those who eat more calories at night, happens due to the stomach's processing of food increasing the chance of interrupting the sleep-wake cycle?
Which could mean that anything that disturbs your sleep-wake cycle has the same effects?

Is the takeaway that the increase in C-Reactive Protein, in those who eat more calories at night, happens due to the stomach's processing of food increasing the chance of interrupting the sleep-wake cycle?

I don't think there is sufficient information to draw the conclusion that only the only contributing factor is the disruption in the sleep wake cycle. It is however possible that is a contributing factor.

Which could mean that anything that disturbs your sleep-wake cycle has the same effects?

I think more research looking into this specifically would be necessary.

Congratulations for your post, thanks for the information , keep it up

Thanks for the kind words! Most appreciated.