| Literature DB >> 22827862 |
Eliane A Lucassen1, Kristina I Rother, Giovanni Cizza.
Abstract
In the last 50 years, the average self-reported sleep duration in the United States has decreased by 1.5-2 hours in parallel with an increasing prevalence of obesity and diabetes. Epidemiological studies and meta-analyses report a strong relationship between short or disturbed sleep, obesity, and abnormalities in glucose metabolism. This relationship is likely to be bidirectional and causal in nature, but many aspects remain to be elucidated. Sleep and the internal circadian clock influence a host of endocrine parameters. Sleep curtailment in humans alters multiple metabolic pathways, leading to more insulin resistance, possibly decreased energy expenditure, increased appetite, and immunological changes. On the other hand, psychological, endocrine, and anatomical abnormalities in individuals with obesity and/or diabetes can interfere with sleep duration and quality, thus creating a vicious cycle. In this review, we address mechanisms linking sleep with metabolism, highlight the need for studies conducted in real-life settings, and explore therapeutic interventions to improve sleep, with a potential beneficial effect on obesity and its comorbidities.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22827862 PMCID: PMC3418485 DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2012.06655.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci ISSN: 0077-8923 Impact factor: 5.691
Figure 1Representative sleep architecture during eight hours of uninterrupted sleep (adapted from Ref. 39). Sleep can be divided into rapid eye movement (REM) and nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. On average, adults spend 75–80% in NREM sleep, which can be further subdivided into stages 1 to 4. Stages 3 and 4 are often referred to as slow-wave sleep (SWS) because of the appearance of well-defined waves of 0.5–4.0 Hz. In REM sleep, a phasic and a tonic phase can be distinguished. Skeletal muscles are atonic or hypotonic during REM sleep (except for the diaphragm, extraocular, and sphincter muscles), but bursts of muscle activity can occur during the phasic phase. Furthermore, dreams mostly take place during REM sleep and are more complex during this stage. Eye movement is only present during the phasic phase. Throughout a normal night of sleep, there are three to five sleep cycles, from NREM (stage 1 to 4) to REM, each cycle taking 90–120 minutes. Humans display less SWS and more REM sleep toward the end of the night.
Figure 2Mean levels of metabolic parameters and sleep stages in lean young men (n = 8 for TSH, cortisol, GH, melatonin, SWS, and REM sleep;48n = 14 for insulin, glucose, total and acetylated ghrelin;76n = 8 for catecholamines73); in 23 lean women for leptin and adiponectin;69 and in 25 individuals (13 females, 12 males) for IL-6 and TNF-α.83 Ghrelin levels are indicated as a percent of mean 24-h values (1027 pg/mL for total ghrelin; 80 pg/mL for acetylated ghrelin); leptin levels are shown as percent change from levels at 08:00. Dark bars below each plot indicate bedtimes. Sleep was monitored polysomnographically during all measurements. Striped bars indicate meal times. Modified, with permission Refs. 48, 69, 73, 76, and 83
Results of 37 human experimental studies assessing the influence of sleep curtailment on metabolism
| Study design Energy intake Behavioral activity | Gender/sample size Age ± SEM (years) Mean weight ± SEM Prestudy conditions | Experimental sleep protocol | Techniques used for blood sampling (time, frequency) | Main findings (sleep deprived vs. longer sleep) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benedict | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 8-h bedtime | Indirect calorimetry pre- and postbreakfast; morning VAS hunger ratings 24 h, every 1.5–3 h | ↑ postprandial glucose (8%) ↓ RMR (5%) and postprandial (20%) metabolic rate ↑ cortisol (7%) |
| Born | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 8-h bedtimes | LPS-stimulated whole blood and ELISA (TNF-α; IL-1β; IL-6) 51 h, every 3 h | ∼ IL-6 ∼ IL-1β; ↑ nocturnal whole blood ∼ TNF-α↑ white blood cells (8%) |
| Brondel | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 8-h bedtime | Actigraphy; 12 daytime VAS hunger ratings | ∼ EE; ↑ physical activity (13%) ↑ hunger; ↑ food intake (22%) |
| Buxton | Men ( | 1: 3 nights of 10-h bedtimes | ivGTT penultimate day; clamp last day; salivary sampling 15:00–21:00 last 2 days, every hour, 24-h urine sampling last 2 days; indirect calorimetry | ↑ insulin resistance (20% by ivGTT; 11% by clamp) ∼ fasting RMR ↑ salivary cortisol (51%) ↑ urinary NE (18%) and EPI (22%) |
| Clore | 5 females, 12 males ( | 1. Group 1 ( | Continuous [3–3H] glucose infusion | ↓ nocturnal fall in glucose use ↓ nocturnal fall in glucose production |
| Donga | 3 females, 4 males ( | 1: 3 nights of 8-h, 30-min bedtimes | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | ↑ insulin resistance (21%) |
| NA | Type 1 diabetes, HbA1c ≤ 8.5%, 1 week of regular bedtimes | 2: 3 nights of 4-h bedtimes | ||
| Dzaja | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 8-h bedtime | 24 h, every h | ↓ GH peak (71%) |
| Frey | 9 females, 10 males ( | 1: 3 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Saliva 36 h, every h; hsELISA (IL-6; IL-1β; CRP) 40 h, every 30 min | ∼ saliva cortisol; ↓ at 13:00 (53%) |
| Gonzáles-Ortiz | 7 females, 7 males ( | 1: baseline “normal sleep” 2: 1 night of TSD | Insulin suppression test with octreotride Once, morning | ↑ insulin resistance (18%) |
| Haack | 6 females, 12 males ( | ( | 24-h urine 24-h blood, every 4 h (high sensitivity ELISA IL-6 and hsCRP) | ∼ food intake ↑ IL-6 (62%) |
| Hursel | Men ( | 1. 2 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Indirect calorimetry | ∼ total EE ↑ physical activity (8%) |
| Irwin | 13 females, 17 males ( | 1: 3 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Flow cytometry; real time PCR ( | ↑ IL-6 monocyte expression (344%) |
| Jung | 2 females, 5 males ( | 1: 2 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Indirect calorimetry | ↑ total EE (7%); ↑ nocturnal EE (32%); ∼ daytime EE ∼ RQ |
| Kuhn | Human subjects ( | 1: 4–5 days “control period” 2: 72–126 h of TSD 3: 3 days “control period” | OGTT Once daily | ↓ glucose tolerance after 3–4 days ↑ 17-OH corticosteroids on Day 2 and 3, then return to baseline ↑ urinary catecholamines |
| Mullington | Men ( | 1. 3 nights 8-h bedtimes | 120 h, every 90 min | ∼ leptin mesor, ↓ leptin circadian amplitude |
| Nedeltcheva | 5 females, 6 males ( | 1: 14 nights of 8.5-h bedtimes | OGTT; ivGTT 24 h, every 15–30 min | ↓ insulin sensitivity (18%) |
| Nedeltcheva | 3 females, 7 males ( | 1: 14 nights of 8.5-h bedtimes | Indirect calorimetry; VAS hunger rating scale before meal/at 22:30, 24 h, every hour | ∼ total EE; ↓ RMR (8%) |
| Omisade | Women ( | 1: 1 night of 10-h bedtime | VAS hunger ratings; salivary cortisol daytime, every 1–2 h; salivary leptin morning and afternoon | ↓ median morning cortisol (19%) |
| Parker | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 8-h bedtime | 72 h, every 30 min | ↑ TSH; ↑ amplitude, longer peak, later nadir/acrophase |
| Pejovic | 11 females, 10 males ( | 1: 4 nights of 8-h bedtimes | VAS hunger ratings 24 h, every 30 min | ∼ cortisol ∼ adiponectin ∼ hunger ↑ leptin (14%) |
| Schmid | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 8-h bedtime | Hypoglycemic clamp, Two morning samples | ↓ glucagon levels (16%) |
| Schmid | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 7-h, 30-min bedtime | Hunger graded 0–9, Two morning samples | ↑ hunger (129%) |
| Schmid | Men ( | 1: 2 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Actigraphy, buffet on day 2, ELISA (IL-6) 08:00–23:00 (every h) | ↑ insulin (40%) and glucose (11%) peak response to breakfast ↓ physical activity (13%) |
| Schmid | Men ( | 1: 1 night of 7-h bedtime | Hypoglycemic clamp 2 morning samples | ∼ insulin resistance ↓ glucagon (8%) |
| Shearer | Men ( | ( | 5 days, every 6 h (ELISA) | No changes in condition 1; in condition 2: ↑ IL-6 ∼ TNF-α↑ sTNF-α receptor I ∼ sTNF-α receptor II |
| Simpson | 67 females, 69 males ( | 1: 2 nights of 10-h bedtimes 2: 5 nights of 4-h bedtimes | Once, morning (10:30–12:00) | ↑ leptin (33%) |
| Simpson | 33 females, 41 males ( | 1: 2 nights of 10-h bedtimes | Once, morning (10:30–12:00) | ∼ adiponectin in men; ↑ in African American women; ↓ in Caucasian women |
| Spiegel | Men ( | 1: 6 nights of 4-h bedtimes | ivGTT; 24-h heart rate variability; salivary sampling 15:00-bedtime, every 30 min; blood sampling 24 h, every 30 min | ↓ glucose clearance (30%) ↓ TSH (26%), ↑fT4 (7%) |
| Spiegel | Men ( | 1: 2 nights of 10 h bedtimes | VAS hunger ratings 08:00–21:00, every 20 min | ↑ hunger (23%; 33–45% for sweets/salty foods) ↓ leptin (18%) ↑ ghrelin (28%) |
| Stamatakis | 2 females, 9 males ( | 1: 1 night of unfragmented sleep | ivGTT; heart rate variability; enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay techniques (IL-6; hsCRP) 2 morning samples (08:00 and 16:00) | ↑ insulin resistance (25%) ↑ morning cortisol (13%) ∼ adiponectin ↑ sympathetic tone (17%) ∼ leptin ∼ Il-6; ∼hsCRP |
| St-Onge | 15 females; 15 males ( | 1: 5 nights of 9-h bedtimes | Double-labeled water (EE); indirect calorimetry (RMR); actigraphy; VAS hunger ratings | ∼ RMR; ∼ EE; ∼ physical activity ∼ hunger; ↑ food intake (12%) |
| Tasali | 4 females, 5 males ( | 1: 2 nights of undisturbed sleep | ivGTT; heart rate variability 24 h, every 20 min | ↑ insulin resistance (25%) ∼ cortisol; ∼ daytime; ∼ nocturnal ↑ sympathovagal balance (14%) |
| Thomas | Men ( | 1: 3 nights of 7-h 45-min bedtimes | [ | ↓ global cerebral glucose metabolic rate (8%), especially the thalamus, prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices |
| Van Cauter | Men ( | 1: 2 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Continuous glucose infusion during phase 2 24 h, every 30 min | ↓ nocturnal GH pulses (70%) |
| VanHelder | Men ( | 60 h of TSD followed by 7-h of recovery sleep | OGTT at 10 h, 60 h, and after recovery sleep | ↑ insulin response (21% in group 1) |
| Van Leeuwen | Men ( | 1: 2 nights of 8-h bedtimes | Flow cytometry, real time PCR (1 morning sample), salivary cortisol (10 times a day) | ∼ cortisol ↑ IL-6 (63%) ↑ IL-1β (37%) ∼ TNF-α↑ hsCRP (45%) |
| Vgontas | 13 females, 12 males ( | 1: 4 nights of 8-h bedtimes | 24 h, every 30 min (ELISA, TNF-α, and IL-6) | ∼ cortisol; ↓ and 2 h earlier peak ↑ IL-6 ↑ TNF-α in males; ∼ in females |
Note: Sleep curtailment was verified by questionnaires/diaries, by actigraphy, or by polysomnography. The percentage of change in metabolic parameters was given in the article or calculated from absolute levels in the text/tables or from graph values of the original article. Metabolic measurements are in plasma/serum, unless otherwise specified. Bed rest was always required during the sleep-deprived state. ∼ similar; TSD: total sleep deprivation; VAS: visual analogue scale; RMR: resting metabolic rate; IL-6: interleukin 6; IL-1β: interleukin 1β; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α; EE: energy expenditure; ivGTT: intravenous glucose tolerance test; RQ: respiratory quotient; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; REM: rapid-eye movement; GH: growth hormone; ACTH: adrenocorticotropic hormone; FDG: fludeoxyglucose; PET: position emission tomography.
Figure 3A simplified schematic representation of putative pathways of sleep curtailment leading to obesity and diabetes, via endocrine mechanisms that stimulate appetite, decrease energy expenditure, and increase insulin resistance. The direction of change (an increase or decrease) of each mechanism due to sleep loss is displayed; increased sympathovagal balance could stimulate EE, depicted by +, while a decreased EE would contribute to obesity. For readability, the relationships between decreases in leptin levels associated with IL-6 and TNF-α production are not displayed. Cortisol and proinflammatory cytokines display a positive bidirectional relationship. Increased insulin levels stimulate orexin secretion and orexic arcuate neurons, while decreasing the activity of anorexic arcuate neurons, leading to a further increase in appetite. Adiponectin influences energy homeostasis, possibly via modulating appetite through arcuate neurons and modulating EE.