Protein, salt make you sleepy after large meals: study

Protein, salt make you sleepy after large meals: study
Protein, salt make you sleepy after large meals: study

WASHINGTON: Do you often feel sleepy after a large meal? Higher protein and salt content in diet as well as the amount of food consumed may be to blame, scientists say.

Scientists from The Scripps Research Institute in the US have for the first time found a way to study ‘food comas’ in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster and explained some of the causes behind this phenomenon.

They created a system that can measure both the sleep and feeding behaviours of individual fruit flies and discovered that, in much the same way as humans, the animals sleep for longer periods following larger meals.

Further studies also showed that certain types of food can promote post-meal sleep.

“In Drosophila, there is a well-documented interaction between sleep and metabolism, whereby flies suppress sleep or increase their activity when starved,” said William Ja, associate professor at Scripps Florida.

“However, the acute effects of food consumption on sleep have not yet been tested, largely because there was no system available to do so,” Ja said.

Researchers created the Activity Recording CAFE (ARC), the first system for flies that enables visual tracking of food consumption and animal motion.

Recordings of fruit flies’ behaviour from this system show that, after eating a meal, the animals sleep more before returning to a normal state of wakefulness.

The sleep period generally lasts around 20 to 40 minutes, with flies that eat larger portions generally sleeping more.

To determine if individual nutrients could modulate post-meal sleep, the team gave the flies food consisting of protein, salt or sugar.

They found that only protein and salt were effectors of post-meal sleep, suggesting that this form of sleep can indeed be regulated by specific food types. (AGENCIES)