‘Catching-up’ on sleep to improve your fitness

A few mornings ago, I was training a client and she was yawning uncontrollably. Naturally, I asked about her sleeping patterns and she disclosed that due to commitments at her job, the reopening of school and being a single parent, sometimes she is unable to get adequate rest during the week, but tries to make up for that on the weekends. That raises the question whether sleeping in on weekends can help you make up for poor weekday sleep. 

Sleep and weight gain

No sleep, no gains in the gym, or losses if we’re talking about fat loss.

A recent meta-study (a study of studies) came to the conclusion that most people need 7 to 8 hours per night and that virtually everyone who slept 5 hours or less per night wound up suffering from various health issues. 

But what about total weekly sleep? Can you make up for missed hours by sleeping in on the weekends? Getting what the researchers call “catch-up” sleep?

A new study looked into this. They wanted to know if there was a relationship between BMI (body mass index, which is a bit crude, but works okay for non-athletes) and the amount of catch-up sleep on the weekend. Lack of sleep is associated with fat gain. But if subjects slept in on the weekend, would they be leaner?

The study

Inadequate sleep messes with you by increasing the risk of obesity and putting your metabolic system out of balance through increases in ghrelin and reductions of leptin levels. This leads to an increased appetite and caloric intake along with poor glucose use. This is not good.

In this new study, the researchers enrolled 2,836 subjects. After an analysis of their sleep habits, they divided them into weekend catch-up sleepers (CUS) or non-CUS groups.

The results

The group that slept in on the weekend had a predicted BMI that was significantly lower than the non-CUS group. The catch-up sleepers actually slept less on weekdays but achieved more sleep across the week by sleeping in on the weekends.

What this means for you

The researchers concluded: “Compensatory sleep extension on weekends may have a protective role against weight gain due to chronic partial sleep loss.”

So, try to get the right amount of sleep as much as you can, but if you find yourself not getting enough sleep during the week, sleep in on the weekend to add to your weekly total hours and reduce the risk of fat gain.