Drs. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Mike Roizen
Dr. Mehmet Oz is host of the popular TV show “The Dr. Oz Show.” He is a professor in the Department of Surgery at Columbia University and directs the Cardiovascular Institute and Complementary Medicine Program and New York-Presbyterian Hospital.

Dr. Mike Roizen is chief medical officer at the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute, an award-winning author, and has been the doctor to eight Nobel Prize winners and more than 100 Fortune 500 CEOs.

Dr. Mehmet Oz,Dr. Mike Roizen

Tags: diet | metabolism | . circadian | Dr. Oz
OPINION

Late-Night Eating Saps Brain Power

Dr. Mehmet Oz, M.D. and Dr. Mike Roizen, M.D. By Friday, 18 August 2017 01:58 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

The comic-strip character Garfield loved midnight snacks. The obsession was memorialized in a song from his 1982 TV special, "Here Comes Garfield."

The song went: "Around midnight, when everybody else is sacking, he'll be snacking/Now does he regret it? Yes, he feels so very blue/And when he gets too round, he tries to cut down/But only for an hour or two."

If you're trying to lose weight, you might regret late-night snacking for more than an hour or two, according to a recent study in the journal Cell Metabolism.

Researchers divided mice into five groups, controlling the time and amount each group ate. The only group to lose weight was the one that ate a lower-calorie diet during the time they were normally active and awake.

Those that ate during their usual resting time didn't lose weight.

And your brain power could suffer from eating at the wrong time, too. Another mouse study found that those who ate only when they'd normally be sleeping performed worse on memory tests and showed changes in the area of their brain associated with learning and memory.

Those same effects from eating at the wrong time definitely apply to people: Disruptions in your circadian rhythm (your internal clock) damage your cognitive health and your metabolic processes.

Late-night eating is one way of throwing off that clock.

Your best bet? Have your last meal at least three hours before bedtime, wait 12 hours before eating again, and have your largest meal of the day at lunchtime.

© 2025 NewsmaxHealth. All rights reserved.


Dr-Oz
Disruptions in your circadian rhythm (your internal clock) damage your cognitive health and your metabolic processes.
diet, metabolism, . circadian, Dr. Oz
251
2017-58-18
Friday, 18 August 2017 01:58 PM
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