Irregular sleep schedules and poor sleep quality are known to be
associated with poor blood sugar control in people who already have
diabetes. In the current study, however, 73% of participants had "prediabetes"
- meaning they weren't yet diabetic but their blood sugar levels
were almost in the diabetes range. The rest had recently been
diagnosed with type 2 diabetes but hadn't been treated yet.
"Don't let the 'pre' fool you - prediabetes is a serious health
condition," public health officials warn on the website of the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Prediabetes puts you at
increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and
stroke."
Overall, the study involved 962 overweight or obese adults, ages 20
to 65, who underwent blood tests and filled out sleep
questionnaires.
Compared to people who said on the questionnaires that they got 7 or
8 hours of sleep every night, people who averaged less than 5 hours
or more than 8 hours of sleep at night had significantly higher
levels of hemoglobin A1C in their blood, reflecting poor blood sugar
control over the past 2 or 3 months.
This was true whether people had diabetes or prediabetes.
"In the past, the general wisdom was that short sleep duration is
bad for you but here we also found that maybe too long of a sleep
duration is also not good for you," lead study author Dr. Babak
Mokhlesi of the University of Chicago told Reuters Health by phone.
The American Academy of Sleep Medicine advises adults to sleep for
at least 7 hours a night.
The current study doesn't prove that sleep habits affect blood sugar
levels or diabetes risks; it only shows a correlation.
[to top of second column] |
How sleeping for more than 8 hours a night might increase the risk
of developing diabetes is not fully understood, the researchers
wrote in Diabetes Care.
Sleeping longer hours could be a sign of underlying health
conditions that in turn lead to worse glucose control, experts
suspect.
"The presumption is that it's the prediabetes itself or other
components of the metabolic syndrome that are pushing people to
sleep longer ... not that their oversleeping is increasing their
risk of developing diabetes," said James Gangwisch, of Columbia
University in New York City, who was not involved in the study.
The study authors found that sleep duration was linked with other
diabetes risk factors, too, aside from hemoglobin A1c. For example,
people who slept more than 8 hours a night had higher fasting blood
sugar levels, on average. And people who slept less than 6 hours a
night, and those who did shift work, had a higher average body mass
index.
The researchers also found that "evening people" who stay up late at
night and sleep late in the morning, and people with "social jet
lag" who go to bed and wake up later on weekends than during the
week, had significantly higher blood pressure.
The next step would be to conduct studies where people are either
made to improve or continue their current irregular sleeping habits
and see if there is an improvement in blood sugar, blood pressure
and BMI levels, said Mokhlesi.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2W5ISKl Diabetes Care, online May 2, 2019
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |