Weight loss while you sleep sounds too good to be true. But a buzzed-about new diet, "The Overnight Diet," claims to help you lose two pounds as you sleep during the first day of the diet. To be sure, getting a full night's rest is good advice for everyone, but how could it result in immediate weight loss?


Research shows that losing sleep can lead to weight gain, but there isn't really a relationship between sufficient sleep (defined as 7.5 to 9.5 hours) and weight loss. The Overnight Diet, however, is not the first to make this logical leap.


As sleep expert and HuffPost Healthy Living blogger Michael Breus, Ph.D. told WebMD in response to another sleep-touting diet: “It’s not so much that if you sleep, you will lose weight, but if you are sleep-deprived, meaning that you are not getting enough minutes of sleep or good quality sleep, your metabolism will not function properly.”


It's true that a deficit of sleep can lead to increased feelings of hunger and overeating as a result, so in that sense, maintaining a healthy sleep schedule does help support a healthy diet.


Indeed, the diet's creator, Caroline Apovian, M.D., the director of nutrition and weight management at Boston Medical Center points to this very advantage:


“That first night, you go to sleep, you sleep your eight hours, you are down two pounds,” she explained to ABC News. “If you continue to get enough sleep every night, you won’t get those hunger pangs. The hunger pangs come from lack of sleep, which induces the hunger hormone to get secreted from your gut.”


Those two pounds she promises, however, will be lost water weight rather than fat.


The diet boasts a once-weekly fast, during which adherents eat homemade, protein-rich smoothies, followed by six days of a low-calorie, protein rich diet. Calorie restriction and intermittent fasting are both proven fat loss techniques and so it's possible that these two aspects of the diet are responsible for some of the results described in the book.


"I keep waiting for us to get tired of going after the new fad diet. But our appetite for these things is insatiable in the culture," David L. Katz M.D., MPH, FACPM, FACP and director of Yale University's Prevention Research Center told HuffPost Healthy Living. "The reason this can work in the short term is that it imposes rules. If you go from undisciplined eating, to any diet no matter what the rules are, chances are you'll lose some weight. But it's not a realistic way to live."


Tell us in the comments: Would you try this diet? Do you believe you could lose weight overnight?


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  • Take Smaller Sips


    It certainly sounds like a tall tale, but research consistently shows that taking in a smaller amount of liquid helps you consume less. And the latest study confirms that not only do <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0053288" target="_hplink">people drink more when they sip big</a>, they also underestimate how much they drank, researchers reported in the journal <em>PloS One</em>. For the study, researchers invited 53 participants to drink as much broth as they wanted, but divided them into three sip-size groups: small sips of five grams, big sips of 15 grams and "free" sips of a natural-seeming size to the participants. They found that those who took small sips drank 30 percent less broth than those who took big or "free" sips.




  • Pick Something Stinky


    Foods with a strong smell may help curb your portion control, <a href="http://www.flavourjournal.com/content/1/1/3">according to a 2012 study in <em>Flavor</em></a>. Study participants were given vanilla custard and were exposed to varying intensities of vanilla scent. When they smelled more vanilla, <a href="http://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=strong-food-smell-cuts-down-quantit-12-03-20">they ate smaller portions</a>, Scientific American reported.




  • Choose A Contrasting Color


    Want to eat less of those mashed potatoes? Don't pick a white plate. Choosing a container with <a href="http://foodpsychology.cornell.edu/outreach/color_plate.html">a color that contrasts the food</a> helps you heap less on to begin with, according to a study in the <em>Journal of Consumer Research</em>.




  • Use A Vibrating Fork


    The HAPIfork helps users from eating too fast by vibrating as soon as it senses too many bites per minute, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20130109/us-tec-gadget-show-gadget-watch-electronic-fork/">thanks to its smart sensor</a>. But user beware. <a href="http://www.popsci.com/gadgets/article/2013-01/ces-2013-buzzing-fork-annoys-you-losing-weight">As PopSci pointed out</a>, "One fatal flaw: Hapifork is available in fork form only. So there's nothing to stop you from, say, picking up a spoon and shoveling a gallon of ice cream into your mouth."




  • Eat On A Smaller Plate


    Eating off a small plate can help trick you into thinking you're eating more than you really are -- and <a href="http://news.health.com/2012/10/24/4-ways-to-cut-calorie-intake-at-every-meal/">that can reduce your consumption</a> by 20 percent.




  • Dim The Lights And The Music


    A study of fast food restaurants found that <a href="http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/08/120828194942.htm">adding softer lights and music inspired customers</a> to eat 175 fewer calories per meal -- an 18 percent decrease -- than if they were in the restaurant's normal environment. Why not try it at home?