Weight Loss and Light Therapy
Diet and exercise get most of the attention when we think about weight and body appearance. What you eat and how you move are essential for how you look and process fat. But they’re far from the only variables, and if you only focus on food and exercise, you’re missing the larger picture of how your body processes fat and maintains weight. Other important factors for weight include your cellular environment, your circadian rhythms, and other lifestyle factors like sleep, stress, and hydration.
This article is not about weight loss products. We will discuss some of the root causes of obesity and weight gain, like imbalances within the body caused by inflammation, poor sleep, or gut health. We’ll also discuss the role light plays in balancing our body and cells, and how red light therapy supports a healthier lifestyle.
How Light and Balance Support Healthy Weight and Fat Loss
Diet and exercise get most of the attention when we think about weight and body appearance. What you eat and how you move are essential for how you look and process fat. But they’re far from the only variables, and if you only focus on food and exercise, you’re missing the larger picture of how your body processes fat and maintains weight. Other important factors for weight include your cellular environment, your circadian rhythms, and other lifestyle factors like sleep, stress, and hydration.
This article is not about weight loss products. We will discuss some of the root causes of obesity and weight gain, like imbalances within the body caused by inflammation, poor sleep, or gut health. We’ll also discuss the role light plays in balancing our body and cells, and how red light therapy supports a healthier lifestyle.
How We Look at Weight and Obesity Is Too Limited
Obesity is a serious problem in the United States: at least a third of Americans are considered obsese, and over half are overweight. [1] There are numerous health risks associated with obesity, like high blood pressure and cholesterol, a higher likelihood of developing type 2 diabetes, and an increased likelihood of heart disease and strokes. [2]
At the same time, weight loss and dieting is a giant industry, with an endless supply of pills, surgeries, diets, classes, and exercises. Most of them are just fads that promote ideas of personal responsibility for weight and appearance, without acknowledging the biological realities of obesity.
Balance Goes Well Beyond Just Diet and Exercise
Maintaining a healthy weight for your body doesn’t come from a dietary hack or a fad exercise routine. It’s the sum total of a healthy, balanced lifestyle. Diet and exercise are important, but they are not the only components. Bodily processes at the cellular level play huge roles in our health. Generally, the human body works better when our cells are in balance and we’re making and using energy efficiently. Our cells and millions of biological processes work optimally when they’re close to a state of homeostasis. You can read more about the importance of cellular balance here.
Common problems like stress, poor sleep, and inflammation can throw our cells out of balance and disrupt our metabolism and digestion. That can affect a person’s ability to process fat and cause weight gains. Our hormones are especially sensitive to cellular imbalances and disturbances in our sleeping, eating, and exercising routines. [3] These issues exist outside of the realm of diet and exercise, but they can all play a part in weight issues. It’s important to remember that while diet and exercise definitely impact your health, they are not the only factors at play.
Next we’ll take a look at some important weight factors, like inflammation, sleep, gut health, and light.
Inflammation and Weight Gain
The “calories in, calories out” focus on diet and exercise is an oversimplification of how the body processes fat. Other key aspects of weight management include hydration, sleep, hormones, circadian rhythms, and how the body works through inflammation.
Inflammation is a natural process that helps the body recover from injury and strain. But if your body is out of balance, it may struggle to efficiently clear out acute inflammation. If inflammation becomes a chronic problem, it can lead to larger health problems, including weight gains. Learn more about inflammation and how it affects your health here.
Cytokine Response: Part of the inflammation process is our immune system releasing cytokines when it detects a threat like an injury or virus. These are proteins that induce inflammation, so your body can respond to an invader or problem. But an overload of cytokines and inflammation can interfere with your insulin response, and that can cause your body to store more fat and gain weight. [4]
Bottom line: inflammation is normal, to a point. Excess cytokines and inflammation can lead to weight gains. Trying to exercise more to lose weight when you’re already inflamed can complicate the recovery process and work against you. To help your body work through inflammation, it’s vital to eat well and exercise, but also to sleep, hydrate, and get lots of healthy light during the day so your body can make energy. It also helps to follow your circadian rhythms by establishing a healthy routine of eating, exercising and sleeping.
Poor Sleep’s Effect on Weight Issues
When people experience fluctuations in their weight and physical appearance, they often look at their plate. Often it makes just as much sense to look at your pillow and examine your sleeping habits. Sleep quality affects nearly every aspect of our health, including weight and fat loss. If you’re struggling with weight issues, poor sleep could be a huge factor.
Poor sleep can knock your body and cells out of balance, and that alone can lead to complications with digestion, metabolism, and weight.
The stomach and other key internal organs work best when our eating aligns with our circadian rhythm. Following a routine or schedule with your eating and your sleep that allows your body to operate along the same patterns is more efficient for your digestion, nutrient absorption, and overall metabolism. Limiting your food intake to a specific window of time is also ideal.
Sleep, Hormones, and Appetite: One of the key ways that sleep affects weight fluctuation is in the regulation of two hormones: ghrelin and leptin. Ghrelin stimulates appetite, while leptin decreases it. These hormones work together to establish your eating patterns.
Higher levels of ghrelin and lower levels of leptin are found when the body is sleep deprived, leading to much higher levels of hunger. [5] If you overeat and still feel hungry, getting enough quality sleep and establishing a healthy sleep cycle can help your body feel less hungry all the time. To learn more about how sleep impacts systemic health and function across the body, check out this article.
Poor Gut Health and Weight Gains
Only recently has medical science started to understand how vital gut health is to our overall health. The gut microbiome is a delicate balance of microorganisms like bacteria that live in the digestive tract and help you digest food. Emerging studies have found that changes in the makeup of the gut microbiome are linked to obesity and obesity-related metabolic disorders. If you want to dig into the science behind gut health and weight fluctuation, here’s an in-depth, peer reviewed article from Nutrition Today. [6]
Light Supports Cellular Balance and a Healthy Lifestyle
Our bodies work better when they’re in balance, and for that we also need an abundance of healthy light every day. Americans spend over 90% of their time indoors and it’s a bigger health risk than most realize. [7] If your cells don’t get enough light, they’ll make energy less efficiently.
Even if you eat well and exercise, if you aren’t getting enough light, it can affect everything from your sleep, to your inflammation levels, to your weight.
Red light therapy, also known as photobiomodulation (PBM) or low level laser therapy (LLLT), is a simple, non-invasive treatment that delivers wavelengths of red and near infrared (NIR) light to the skin and cells. The term “red light therapy” refers to treatments from light-emitting diodes (LEDs) that deliver specific wavelengths of red and NIR light to the skin and cells. You can learn more about the basics of red light therapy here.
Red light therapy treatments are simple and easy. Joovv recommends 10 minutes per treatment area, ideally every day. This can help supply the mitochondria in your cells with the light needed to make the energy that powers your body. Red light therapy allows a person to supplement the sunlight they get from their environment with concentrated wavelengths of red and NIR light, in the comfort of their own home.
Wavelengths of red and NIR light have been shown to stimulate the mitochondria, the powerhouse of the cell, and can optimize the cellular respiration process that makes ATP (adenosine triphosphate) energy, which increases function, speeds healing, and lowers inflammation & pain, as demonstrated in numerous peer-reviewed studies. [8]. As discussed earlier, chronic inflammation can be a cause of weight gain.
Red light therapy and increased circulation: Another key effect of red light therapy is increased circulation. With regards to weight issues, increased circulation has been linked to increased fat burning. [9] This burning occurs specifically in brown fat, which is a type of body fat that is activated when your body temperature drops. Brown fat helps maintain your body temperature by producing heat. [10]
Conclusion: Balance Is Your Best Bet For Healthy Lifestyle
Maintaining a healthy weight for your body doesn’t come from a trendy diet or a new fad exercise technique. It’s the result of a healthy, balanced lifestyle. Weight and fat are complex health issues, and there’s no easy answer. There are many factors that can contribute to weight issues, not just diet and exercise. Sleep, inflammation, circadian rhythms, and gut health are also key weight factors. Finding a healthy balance of exercise, diet, and light can help to level out your body’s internal processes and support your healthiest weight.
Sources and References:
[1] National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Overweight & Obesity Statistics
[2] National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Health Risks of Being Overweight.
[3] National Academy of Sports Medicine. Hormone Balance For Weight Loss: Fact or Fiction?
[4] Garcia Weight Loss & Athletic Centers. Chronic Inflammation and Weight Gain.
[5] The Sleep Foundation. The Connection Between Sleep and Overeating.
[6] Cindy D. Davis. The Gut Microbiome and Its Role in Obesity. Nutrition Today. 2016 Jul.
[7] Klepeis NE, Nelson WC, Ott WR, et al. The National Human Activity Pattern Survey (NHAPS): a resource for assessing exposure to environmental pollutants. Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology. 2001 May.
[8] Hamblin M. “Mechanisms and Mitochondrial Redox Signaling in Photobiomodulation” Photochemistry and Photobiology. 2017 October.
[9] Turning on Blood Flow Turns on Fat-Burning Brown Fat in Mice. American Physiological Society
[10] Mayo Clinic. What is Brown Fat? How is It Different from other body fat?