Too much or too little sleep may raise the risk of diabetes in men, but not women, a study by European researchers suggests.
"Even when you are healthy, sleeping too much or too
little can have detrimental effects on your health. This research shows
how important sleep is to a key aspect of health -- glucose [sugar]
metabolism," said senior study author Femke Rutters. She's with the VU
Medical Center in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
The study involved nearly 800 healthy adults in 14
European countries. Compared to men who slept about seven hours a night,
the men who slept the most or the least were more likely to have an
impaired ability to break down sugar and to have higher blood sugar
levels, the research found. This put them at increased risk for
diabetes, the investigators said.
But compared to women who slept an average amount, the
women who slept the most or least were more responsive to the hormone
insulin and also had enhanced function of insulin-producing beta cells
in the pancreas. These findings suggest sleep problems may not increase
women's risk of diabetes, the scientists said.
The study is the first to show the opposite effect of
sleep problems on diabetes risk in men and women, the researchers said,
although they did not prove that sleep problems cause diabetes risk to
rise in men.
During the last 50 years, the average amount of sleep for
individuals has decreased by 1.5 to two hours a night, and the
prevalence of diabetes has doubled, according to Rutters.