mechanistic
Analysis v1
Strong Support

Eating dinner late relative to the body's natural melatonin rise raises blood glucose levels after eating by about 15% in young adults, regardless of whether they sleep late or at their usual time. This suggests that when you eat matters more for blood sugar than when you sleep.

54
Pro
0
Against

Evidence from Studies

Supporting (1)

54

Community contributions welcome

Eating dinner late, even if you go to bed late or on time, makes your blood sugar spike more after eating — but staying up later after dinner doesn’t make it worse. The problem is eating when your body thinks it should be sleeping, not when you actually go to bed.

Contradicting (0)

0

Community contributions welcome

No contradicting evidence found

Gold Standard Evidence Needed

According to GRADE and EBM methodology, here is what ideal scientific evidence would look like to definitively prove or disprove this specific claim, ordered from strongest to weakest evidence.