Close X
Thursday, December 5, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Not Only What You Eat, When You Eat Also Impacts Heart

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Mar, 2015 04:42 PM
    A team of Indian-American researchers has found that not just what you eat but when you do so is equally important in order to protect your heart from early ageing.
     
    The results from experiments over fruit flies can one day translate into cardiac and obesity-related health benefits for humans, they noted.
     
    "Time-restricted feeding would not require people to drastically change their lifestyles but just the times of day they eat," said Girish Melkani, biologist at the San Diego State University.
     
    The benefits of a time-restricted diet were not exclusive to young flies.
     
    When the researchers introduced these dietary time restrictions to older flies, their hearts became healthier too.
     
    "Even if you introduce time-restricted feeding very late, you still have some benefit," Melkani pointed out.
     
    Melkani, along with Satchidananda Panda, circadian rhythms expert at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies and Shubhroz Gill from the Broad Institute in Boston found that by limiting the time span during which fruit flies could eat, they could prevent aging- and diet-related heart problems.
     
    Previous research has found that people who tend to eat later in the day and into the night have a higher chance of developing heart disease than people who cut off their food consumption earlier.
     
    "So what is happening when people eat late? They are not changing their diet just the time," Melkani added.
     
    In their experiments, one group of two-week-old fruit flies was given a standard diet of cornmeal and allowed to feed all day long.
     
    Another group was allowed access to the food for only 12 hours a day.
     
    After three weeks, the results were clear.
     
    Flies on the 12-hour time-restricted feeding schedule slept better, did not gain as much weight and had far healthier hearts than their "eat anytime" counterparts, even though they ate similar amounts of food.
     
    The take-home message is to cut down on the late-night snacks, the trio concluded.
     
    The study was published in the journal Science.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Viagra may protect your heart

    Viagra may protect your heart
    An ingredient in Viagra not only can enhance the pleasure between the sheets but can also protect your heart, a study has found....

    Viagra may protect your heart

    How to prevent brain damage after trauma

    How to prevent brain damage after trauma
    A treatment to prevent the body's immune system from killing brain cells can reduce the brain damage caused by head injuries, a study co-authored by....

    How to prevent brain damage after trauma

    Kids' genes put mothers at risk of joints disease

    Kids' genes put mothers at risk of joints disease
     Having children with certain genetic makeup, inherited from the father, increases the mother's risk of rheumatoid arthritis - a chronic....

    Kids' genes put mothers at risk of joints disease

    Depression and ageing linked to single gene

    Depression and ageing linked to single gene
    A group of researchers from Germany and the US has found that both ageing and depression are associated with changes in a single gene....

    Depression and ageing linked to single gene

    Virus infection ups diabetes risk in kids

    Virus infection ups diabetes risk in kids
    Children who have been infected with enterovirus are around 50 percent more likely to develop Type 1 diabetes, says a study....

    Virus infection ups diabetes risk in kids

    Is Ebola the world's worst infectious disease threat since AIDS?

    Is Ebola the world's worst infectious disease threat since AIDS?
    Comparisons between the two deadly diseases surfaced in the last few months as the Ebola outbreak escalated. Both emerged from Africa and erupted into an international health crisis. And both have been a shocking reminder that mankind's battle against infectious diseases can take a sudden, terrible turn for the worse.

    Is Ebola the world's worst infectious disease threat since AIDS?