Habitual Nightly Fasting Duration, Eating Timing, and Eating Frequency are Associated with Cardiometabolic Risk in Women

Oct 6, 2020Nutrients

Nightly Fasting Time, Meal Timing, and How Often Women Eat Are Linked to Heart and Metabolic Health Risks

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Abstract

In a study of 116 women, longer nightly fasting duration was associated with poorer cardiovascular health and higher diastolic blood pressure.

  • Longer nightly fasting duration was linked to a decrease in cardiovascular health scores.
  • Higher diastolic blood pressure was observed with longer nightly fasting duration in both cross-sectional and prospective analyses.
  • Later timing of the first eating occasion correlated with poorer cardiovascular health and increased diastolic blood pressure and fasting glucose after one year.
  • Increased waist circumference was associated with both longer nightly fasting duration and later eating times.
  • Eating frequency was inversely related to diastolic blood pressure in both cross-sectional and prospective analyses.
  • A higher percentage of daily calories consumed at the largest evening meal was connected to increased diastolic blood pressure.

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Key numbers

-0.22
Decrease in Cardiovascular Health Score
Each 1-hour increase in NFD correlates with a decrease in cardiovascular health score.
1.08 mmHg
Increase in Diastolic Blood Pressure
Each 1-hour increase in NFD correlates with higher diastolic blood pressure.
-1.94 mmHg
Decrease in Diastolic Blood Pressure with Increased Eating Frequency
Each additional eating occasion correlates with lower diastolic blood pressure.

Full Text

What this is

  • This prospective study examined how nightly fasting duration (NFD), eating timing, and frequency affect cardiometabolic health in women.
  • 116 US women participated, providing dietary records and health measurements over one year.
  • Findings indicate that longer NFD and later eating times correlate with poorer cardiovascular health and higher blood pressure.

Essence

  • Longer nightly fasting duration and later eating times are linked to poorer cardiovascular health and increased blood pressure in women. Conversely, more frequent eating may lower blood pressure.

Key takeaways

  • Longer NFD is associated with poorer cardiovascular health. Each 1-hour increase in NFD correlates with a β = -0.22 for cardiovascular health score and a β = 1.08 mmHg increase in diastolic blood pressure.
  • Later timing of the first eating occasion negatively impacts health. A 30-minute delay in the first meal correlates with a β = -0.20 for cardiovascular health and a β = 1.18 mmHg increase in diastolic blood pressure.
  • Increased eating frequency is associated with lower blood pressure. Each additional eating occasion corresponds to a β = -1.94 mmHg decrease in diastolic blood pressure.

Caveats

  • The study's sample size is modest, which may limit the reliability of findings. Additionally, the one-year follow-up may not capture long-term changes in eating patterns.
  • Potential confounding factors, such as seasonal variations affecting eating patterns, were not fully addressed, which may influence the results.

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