Skip to main content

Another Study Ties Poor Sleep to Type 2 Diabetes

Medically reviewed by Carmen Pope, BPharm. Last updated on July 23, 2024.

By Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, July 23, 2024 -- Consistently bad sleep is linked to a person’s risk of developing type 2 diabetes, a new study shows.

Both too little and too much sleep is tied to diabetes risk, and swinging wildly between the two patterns of poor sleep reflects the most risk, researchers reported recently in the journal Diabetologia.

The findings support “the importance of sleep health in midlife, particularly maintaining regular sleep schedules over time, to reduce the risk of adverse cardiometabolic conditions,” said researcher Kelsie Full, a behavioral epidemiologist and assistant professor of medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn.

For the study, researchers analyzed the long-term sleep patterns of more than 36,000 adults participating in a health study of residents in 12 southeastern states in the United States. About 62% of the participants were Black people.

The team examined the participants’ sleep patterns based on what they reported at the start of the study, as well as during a follow-up that took place an average of five years later. Poor sleep was defined as either fewer than seven hours or more than nine hours a night.

“One of the main strengths of our study was that we focused on long-term sleep pattern rather than one-time measurement,” said lead researcher Qian Xiao, an associate professor of epidemiology, human genetics, and environmental sciences at the UT Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health.

The strongest association with diabetes was found among people who reported extreme changes in sleep patterns, results show.

People who started sleeping too little and grew to sleep too much had the greatest diabetes risk, 51% higher than people with a consistently normal sleep pattern, results show.

The next highest was people who started off sleeping too much and wound up sleeping too little, with a 45% increased risk of diabetes compared to consistently normal sleepers, researchers found.

“By focusing on longitudinal sleep patterns, we demonstrated the importance of maintaining a healthy sleep pattern over time for metabolic health,” Xiao said in a Vanderbilt news release.

Wildly fluctuating sleep patterns have been linked in other studies to poor control of blood sugar levels, researchers said.

Abnormally long sleep duration also might reflect the presence of diabetes-related fatigue or other risk factors associated with the chronic illness, the team added.

Studies are needed to evaluate whether improving sleep health can improve health, researchers said.

The new results jibe with another study published last week involving 84,000 people enrolled in an ongoing U.K. study.

Those findings, published July 17 in the journal Diabetes Care, showed that people with irregular sleep were 34% more likely to develop type 2 diabetes. Irregular sleep was defined as sleep duration that changed by an average of 60 minutes or more between nights.

Sources

  • Vanderbilt University, news release, June 27, 2024

Disclaimer: Statistical data in medical articles provide general trends and do not pertain to individuals. Individual factors can vary greatly. Always seek personalized medical advice for individual healthcare decisions.

© 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Read this next

More Americans With Diabetes Are Turning to Marijuana

WEDNESDAY, July 24, 2024 -- As marijuana loses much of its stigma and laws around its use relax, Americans are increasingly consuming it medically and recreationally. Americans...

Study Finds Big Shift in Who's Using GLP-1 Meds Like Ozempic

TUESDAY, July 23, 2024 -- The boom in using GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic to treat obesity has resulted in a bust regarding the drugs’ original purpose, which was to treat type 2...

Fat Cats Purrfect for Studying Obesity in Humans

FRIDAY, July 19, 2024 -- Pudgy with a purpose: Fat cats could help humans better understand the way gut bacteria influences conditions like obesity and type 2 diabetes, a new...

More news resources

Subscribe to our newsletter

Whatever your topic of interest, subscribe to our newsletters to get the best of Drugs.com in your inbox.