If only you could work off the calories from that froyo you had
earlier while passed out on the couch. Sounds too good to be true,
right? Well, it may not be that far off: Turning down the thermostat while you sleep could help rev up your metabolism, according to a new study conducted by the National Institute of Health Clinical Center.
For the study, 31 healthy people slept in either a 75-degree room or a
66-degree room. Researchers found that the colder sleepers burned more
than 7 percent more calories than the warm sleepers—likely because their
bodies were working to raise their core body temperature to a stable
98.6 degrees, says study author Francesco Saverio Celi, MD, MHSc, of the
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease.
If you lowered the thermostat to 66 degrees at bedtime, you could
burn an extra 100 calories over the course of 24 sleeping hours,
according to study results. That might not sound like much, but it adds
up—in theory at least.
See, researchers don’t yet know whether your body compensates for
these calories in another way—like by making you hungrier or less amped
to work out when you’re awake, says Celi. Still, if you’re trying to
lose a few pounds, it can’t hurt to turn down the temperature before you
crawl under the covers. Just make sure you don’t pile on the blankets
or wear your warmest pajamas at the same time: You can’t expect to see
results unless you tough it out in the cold, says Celi.
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