Literature DB >> 18591489

Associations between sleep loss and increased risk of obesity and diabetes.

Kristen L Knutson1, Eve Van Cauter.   

Abstract

During the past few decades, sleep curtailment has become a very common in industrialized countries. This trend for shorter sleep duration has developed over the same time period as the dramatic increase in the prevalence of obesity and diabetes. Evidence is rapidly accumulating to indicate that chronic partial sleep loss may increase the risk of obesity and diabetes. Laboratory studies in healthy volunteers have shown that experimental sleep restriction is associated with an adverse impact on glucose homeostasis. Insulin sensitivity decreases rapidly and markedly without adequate compensation in beta cell function, resulting in an elevated risk of diabetes. Prospective epidemiologic studies in both children and adults are consistent with a causative role of short sleep in the increased risk of diabetes. Sleep curtailment is also associated with a dysregulation of the neuroendocrine control of appetite, with a reduction of the satiety factor, leptin, and an increase in the hunger-promoting hormone, ghrelin. Thus, sleep loss may alter the ability of leptin and ghrelin to accurately signal caloric need, acting in concert to produce an internal misperception of insufficient energy availability. The adverse impact of sleep deprivation on appetite regulation is likely to be driven by increased activity in neuronal populations expressing the excitatory peptides orexins that promote both waking and feeding. Consistent with the laboratory evidence, multiple epidemiologic studies have shown an association between short sleep and higher body mass index after controlling for a variety of possible confounders.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18591489      PMCID: PMC4394987          DOI: 10.1196/annals.1417.033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  113 in total

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  252 in total

1.  Association of estimated sleep duration and naps with mortality and cardiovascular events: a study of 116 632 people from 21 countries.

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Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2019-05-21       Impact factor: 29.983

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Review 4.  Beyond fast food and slow motion: weighty contributors to the obesity epidemic.

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Review 5.  Hypothalamic control of sleep in aging.

Authors:  Asya Rolls
Journal:  Neuromolecular Med       Date:  2012-03-09       Impact factor: 3.843

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Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  2010-05-08       Impact factor: 10.122

7.  Short sleep duration is associated with higher energy intake and expenditure among African-American and non-Hispanic white adults.

Authors:  Ruth E Patterson; Jennifer A Emond; Loki Natarajan; Katherine Wesseling-Perry; Laurence N Kolonel; Patricia Jardack; Sonia Ancoli-Israel; Lenore Arab
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2014-02-12       Impact factor: 4.798

8.  An Integrated Risk Reduction Intervention can reduce body mass index in individuals being treated for bipolar I disorder: results from a randomized trial.

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Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2014-12-06

10.  SIRT1 Relays Nutritional Inputs to the Circadian Clock Through the Sf1 Neurons of the Ventromedial Hypothalamus.

Authors:  Ricardo Orozco-Solis; Giorgio Ramadori; Roberto Coppari; Paolo Sassone-Corsi
Journal:  Endocrinology       Date:  2015-03-12       Impact factor: 4.736

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