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Longitudinal Study Ties Poor Sleep Quality and Quantity to Diabetes

adminJuly 28, 2023

Fewer than six hours or more than 10 hours of sleep and poor quality of sleep are associated with a greater risk for diabetes, according to research being presented at ENDO 2023.

Poor sleep quantity and quality and its impact on the risk for diabetes or obesity has been previously studied. However, this study, published in the Journal of Clinical Medicine, sought to explore the longitudinal effects.

“Most previous studies did not examine changes in various glycometabolic parameters, like over 14 years. The pattern of changes in various glycemic parameters may provide clues to the mechanism underlying the association between sleep duration and incident diabetes mellitus,” says Wonjin Kim,  MD, PhD, of CHA Gangnam Medical Center and associate professor at CHA University School of Medicine in Seoul, South Korea, in a release.

Kim and colleagues collected data from 8,816 of 10,030 healthy participants of the ongoing Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study-Ansung and Ansan Cohort Study. They identified diabetes cases and sleep duration and quality. Sleep duration was categorized into four groups: less than six, six to seven, eight to nine, or nine hours per day. Sleep quality was measured among those with a sleep duration of less than 10 hours per day.

During the 14-year follow-up period, 18% (1,630 of 8,816) were diagnosed with diabetes. The researchers observed a U-shaped relationship between sleep duration and incident diabetes, with the greatest risk when sleep duration was greater than or equal to 10 hours per day. During the study, this group also showed decreased insulin glycogenic index, which is a marker of insulin secretory function. The risk for incident diabetes increased among study participants who slept less than 10 hours per day when their Epworth Sleepiness Scale score was over 10.

“Even if sleep duration is less than 10 hours, the likelihood of developing diabetes is greater when quality of sleep decreases,” Kim says in a release.

Photo 45531924 © Tab1962 | Dreamstime.com

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