PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Whether your lose or gain weight depends on weekdays

Weight rhythms: Weight increases during weekends and decreases during weekdays

2014-02-03
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Brian Wansink
foodandbrandlab@cornell.edu
607-254-4960
Cornell Food & Brand Lab
Whether your lose or gain weight depends on weekdays Weight rhythms: Weight increases during weekends and decreases during weekdays

There are sleep cycles and there are also weight loss cycles. Almost everyone loses weight on weekdays and gains weight on weekends. What separates the slim from the heavy isn't how much more they gain on weekends. It's how much they lose during the weekdays. In this study, Dr. Brian Wansink from Cornell University, in collaboration with researchers from the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and Tampere University of Technology, looks into the impact that the seven-days-a-week human cycle has on weight.

Eighty adults participated in the study, ranging in age from 25 to 62 years old. These individuals were categorized according to relative weight changes: weight losers (-3% weight loss), weight gainers (+1% weight gain), and weight maintainers (-3% to 1% weight change). These individuals were asked to weigh themselves after waking up before breakfast. Only weight measurements that were taken over at least seven consecutive days were included in the analysis. The minimum follow-up time was 15 days and maximum 330 days. The main objective of the study was to observe whether weight fluctuation is dependent on the days of the week. Weekly weight patterns were analyzed across the three groups: weight losers, weight gainers and weight maintainers.

The results revealed a clear pattern in weekly weight fluctuation with higher weight after weekends (Sunday and Monday) and decreasing weight during the weekdays reaching the lowest point on Friday. Unexpectedly the researchers found a difference between weight losers and weight gainers in these fluctuation patterns. Weight losers had stronger compensation pattern (i.e. after weekend the decrease started immediately and continued downward until Friday) whereas weight gainers had more variability between days and no clear decrease during weekdays. Weight losers reached week's maximum weight in 59% of cases on Sunday and Monday and week's minimum weight in 60% of cases on Friday or Saturday. Among weight gainers no such a pattern was seen. Minimum and maximum weights did not systematically appear on certain days but they were evenly distributed all over the week.

Based on these results, weight variations between weekdays and weekends should be considered normal instead of weight gain. On the weekends people have more time to go out and eat. Some indulging during weekends makes no harm but for successful weight loss it is important to notice these rhythms and take steps to reverse the upward trends after the weekend, even if it has to wait until Monday. Successful weight control is more likely to happen and for the long run if one is not too strict with one's diet but allows for short-term splurges.



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Single-sex education unlikely to offer advantage over coed schools, research finds

2014-02-03
WASHINGTON - Single-sex education does not educate girls and ...

Fruit flies reveal normal function of a gene mutated in spinocerebellar ataxia type 7

2014-02-01
KANSAS CITY, MO—Disruptive clumps of mutated protein are often blamed for clogging cells and interfering with brain function in patients with the neurodegenerative ...

DNA of peanut-allergic kids changes with immune therapy, Stanford/Packard study finds

2014-02-01
STANFORD, Calif. — Treating a peanut allergy with oral immunotherapy changes the DNA of the patient's immune cells, according to a new study from the Stanford University ...

Studies find new links between sleep duration and depression

2014-02-01
DARIEN, IL – A genetic study of adult twins and a community-based study of adolescents both report novel links ...

Caring for animals may correlate with positive traits in young adults

2014-02-01
NORTH GRAFTON, Mass. (January 31, 2014)—Young adults who care for an animal may have stronger social relationships and connection to their communities, according ...

Dartmouth scientists develop protocol to harvest mouse cell lines for melanoma research

2014-02-01
Dartmouth researchers have developed a protocol that permits cells harvested from melanoma tumors in mice to grow readily in cell culture. Their ...

NASA catches Tropical Depression Kajiki over central Philippines

2014-02-01
Tropical Storm Kajiki developed from the second tropical depression of the Northwestern Pacific Ocean season and quickly moved over the central Philippines. NASA's Aqua satellite passed overhead ...

NASA's Aqua satellite sees System 91S struggling

2014-02-01
NASA's Aqua satellite provided infrared data on System 91S in the Mozambique Channel that showed a system battered by wind shear, stretched out, with broken convection. A false-colored infrared image was created ...

Dormant prostate cancer cells may be reawakened by factors produced in inflammatory cells

2014-02-01
LOS ANGELES (Jan. 31, 2014) – Researchers in the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute discovered in pre-clinical models that dormant prostate cancer ...

Down to EARTH: Interview with Department of the Interior Secretary, Sally Jewell

2014-02-01
Alexandria, VA – EARTH Magazine sits down with Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell to discuss the role of geoscience at the Department of the Interior, including the National ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Unveiling the mystery of electron dynamics in the 'quantum tunneling barrier' for the first time

Do dogs judge you?

Human-AI ‘collaboration’ makes it simpler to solve quantum physics problems

Be Well Texas at UT Health San Antonio to lead major statewide expansion of opioid use disorder and recovery services

Freshwater fish, too, attracted to artificial root structures

In hard-to-treat form of tuberculosis, shorter, gentler therapy shows unequal benefit

Warming oceans a turn-off for female Critically Endangered sharks

University of Surrey launches Space Institute to drive the UK's small satellite boom and tackle urgent global challenges

Look to the data, not the marketing: Turfgrass research shows no differences in ‘penetrant’ and ‘retainer’ wetting agents

New organ recovery technique could make more heart transplants available

NCSA supporting Georgia Tech in new AI venture

Revised, more accurate Baltic ringed seal count – Hunting slows population growth

Eight babies born after Mitochondrial Donation treatment to reduce transmission of mitochondrial DNA disease

Music may reduce distress for dementia patients

The American Ornithological Society announces its 2025 research grantees

Fetal exposure to vape liquids linked to changes in skull shape

Did a meteor impact trigger a landslide in the Grand Canyon?

Study suggests some maternal HIV infections may be missed during pregnancy

Bacterial genomes hold clues for creating personalized probiotics

Rice University scientists discover way to engineer stronger soft devices through smarter silicone bonding

Innovation Crossroads welcomes six entrepreneurs for Cohort 2025

Researchers explore ways to better safeguard romaine supply

Spider’s visual trickery can fool AI

During pregnancy, are newer antiseizure medications safer than older drugs?

Do race and ethnicity play a role in a person’s risk of peripheral neuropathy?

Older adults who increased their regular walking pace by just 14 steps per minute were more likely to experience clinically significant improvements in a test of aerobic capacity and walking endurance

For adults with hearing loss, linear amplification (amplification across all sound levels, available with some hearing aids) might restore their ability to recognize emotion in voices

Self-reporting climate anxiety in the United States is linked to being young, female, believing climate change will impact you personally, and more frequent media and community discussions around clim

A “silent epidemic” of stimulant use is shadowing the most recent opioid epidemic

Food insecurity causes anxiety and depression

[Press-News.org] Whether your lose or gain weight depends on weekdays
Weight rhythms: Weight increases during weekends and decreases during weekdays