IE Highlights

Search
Indian Express
Web
Advanced Search
Search Archives

Advertisments

Matrimonials Register FREE on Naukri.com. Freelance Talent Emailer Call Home Rs.250 cashback for credit cards* Yatra Power Deals

Send Gifts & Flowers

Live Cricket

World

Crash diets ‘may reduce lifespan’: Study

Agencies

Posted online: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 at 1526 hrs Print Email


London, April 30:: Parents, beware! Binge eating and crash dieting could significantly reduce the life expectancy of your kid, a new study has found.

Researchers at Glasgow University have carried out the study on stickleback fish and found that when given a “binge then diet” food regime, their lifespan gets reduced by upto 25 per cent, the ‘Proceedings of the Royal Society B’ journal reported in its latest edition.

“Applying this to humans, it would only occur in children and teenagers. But it would be for extreme switches in diet. Just skipping lunches would not have any effect, but if they had several weeks of one diet followed by several weeks of the extreme opposite, then there could be an effect,” lead researcher Prof Neil Metcalfe said.

In their study, the researchers also found that the difference in lifespan was not a consequence of more rapid ageing but an increase in the risk of sudden death.

“The fish on the fluctuating diet put just as much effort into breeding -- the males became brightly coloured as usual and females produced the normal number of eggs. However, on average their lifespan was three-quarters that of animals eating a constant amount every day.

“It seems that uneven growth, due to the fluctuation in the amount eaten per day, is responsible for the increase in the risk of sudden death. This is possibly because the body tissues are more likely to have imperfections due to growth spurts,” the ‘BBC News’ portal quoted Prof Metcalfe as saying.

Similar results would most likely be seen in other animals with short lifespans that grow throughout their lives, said Prof Metcalfe.

Ads By Google

Post CommentView CommentsWrite to Editor

All Headlines All Front Page News
Your comment[s] on this article


Be the first to comment on this story.

Total comment[s]:0 | Read comment[s]| Post your comment

Most Read Articles

Bengal in reverse gear, no Nano launchUpstaging Mamata’s drama: Tata institute graduate, Ford Foundation & JP, The SocialistCong-BJP bridge across Amarnath dividePalin daughter interrupts McCain scriptHope, skip and jump