Lack of Sleep Increases Diabetes Risk
New
York: Beyond temporary mood disorders
and tiredness, lack of sleep can inflict lasting damage on your body as
researchers have found that insufficient sleep can increase the risk of
diabetes, a chronic condition.
Lack of
sleep reduces the body's sensitivity to insulin, impairing the ability to
regulate blood sugar and increasing the risk of diabetes, the researchers
explained.
"We
found that when people get too little sleep it leaves them awake at a time when
their body clock is telling them they should be asleep," said the study's
lead author Kenneth Wright, professor at University of Colorado Boulder in the
US.
"And
when they eat something in the morning, it impairs their ability to regulate
their blood sugar levels," Wright noted.
The
researchers looked at a small number of healthy men and women in their study.
Half of
the participants initially slept for up to five hours a night for five days to
simulate a regular work week.
Then
they slept for up to nine hours a night for five days. The other half completed
the sleep conditions in the opposite order.
Blood
tests later showed that those who slept five hours a night had a reduced
sensitivity to insulin, which in time could increase the risk of getting
diabetes.
But
when they slept nine hours a night, oral insulin sensitivity returned to
normal. Still, it was not enough time to restore intravenous insulin
sensitivity to baseline levels.
The
findings suggest that lack of sleep causes metabolic stress.
The
study appeared in the journal Current Biology
Lack of Sleep Increases Diabetes Risk
Reviewed by Anonymous
on
November 06, 2015
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