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  #1   ^
Old Fri, Mar-10-06, 23:26
kwikdriver's Avatar
kwikdriver kwikdriver is offline
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Posts: 2,581
 
Plan: No grains, no sugar.
Stats: 001/045/525 Male 72
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Progress: 8%
Default Sleeping too little, or too long, tied to diabetes

Quote:
NEW YORK - Getting too little -- or too much -- sleep may increase a person's risk of developing type 2 diabetes, new research suggests.

"Sleep duration may be a novel risk factor for the development of clinical diabetes," conclude the researchers in the March issue of Diabetes Care.

Dr. Henry Klar Yaggi from Yale University in New Haven, Conn. and two colleagues studied the long-term (15-year) impact of sleep duration on the development of diabetes in more than 1,100 middle-aged and elderly men who were free of diabetes in 1987-1989 and were followed until 2004.

Men getting no more than 6 hours of sleep per night, as well as those getting more than 8 hours of shut eye per night, were at significantly increased risk for developing diabetes, compared to men getting 7 to 8 hours of sleep each night.

The risk of diabetes was roughly twofold higher in men reporting short sleep duration and more than threefold higher in those reporting long sleep duration, compared with men sleeping 7 to 8 hours nightly.

"This U-shaped distribution of risk with respect to sleep duration has been reported previously for coronary heart disease, all cause mortality, and diabetes in women," Yaggi told Reuters Health.

The elevated risks with short or long durations of sleep "remained essentially unchanged" after adjustment for several factors including age, blood pressure, smoking status and waist circumference, the authors say.

However, relative risks were reduced "considerably" when adjusted for testosterone, suggesting to the team that the effects of sleep on diabetes could be mediated via changes in the body's levels of this hormone.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11766016/

The actual research is here.

Last edited by kwikdriver : Fri, Mar-10-06 at 23:39.
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  #2   ^
Old Sat, Mar-11-06, 09:31
TheCaveman's Avatar
TheCaveman TheCaveman is offline
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Plan: Angry Paleo
Stats: 375/205/180 Male 6'3"
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Location: Sacramento, CA
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Dang! Beat me to it, Kwik. Interesting, eh?
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  #3   ^
Old Sat, Mar-11-06, 09:53
ProfGumby's Avatar
ProfGumby ProfGumby is offline
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Posts: 2,927
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 361/285.0/240.0 Male 5'11"
BF:Shake Hands w/Beef
Progress: 63%
Location: In Da U.P. eh? Menominee
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Well, I'm screwed...............LOL!!

Very interesting stuff though. I guess there is such a thing as the right amount of sleep time after all.
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  #4   ^
Old Sat, Mar-11-06, 11:35
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nawchem nawchem is offline
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Posts: 8,701
 
Plan: No gluten, CAD
Stats: 196.0/158.5/149.0 Female 62
BF:36/29.0/27.3
Progress: 80%
Default

For me it works the other way too. When my blood sugar is screwed up it messes up my sleep. When my carbs are below 30 or above 100 I get insomnia.

Thanks Caveman! One of your posts mentioned the need for a completely dark room, doing that helps me stay asleep.
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  #5   ^
Old Sat, Mar-11-06, 18:34
GlendaRC's Avatar
GlendaRC GlendaRC is offline
Posts: 8,787
 
Plan: Atkins maintenance
Stats: 170/120/130 Female 65 inches & shrinking
BF:
Progress: 125%
Location: Victoria, BC Canada
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Hmmmm ... I wonder if they've followed through to discover which is cause and which is effect? Or did I miss that? Sounds like DH and I are both doomed ... we do like our 8 hours plus naps!
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  #6   ^
Old Sat, Mar-11-06, 20:29
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ItsTheWooo ItsTheWooo is offline
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Plan: My Own
Stats: 280/118/117.5 Female 5ft 5.25 in
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Progress: 100%
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Sleep has a profound influence on my metabolism and sugar tolerance. Getting enough sleep influences my metabolism almost like exercise.
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  #7   ^
Old Sat, Mar-11-06, 20:37
ItsTheWooo's Avatar
ItsTheWooo ItsTheWooo is offline
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Plan: My Own
Stats: 280/118/117.5 Female 5ft 5.25 in
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BTW I would bet my life that the men who are sleeping more than 8 hrs = overtired from metabolic disease (result)... whereas the men getting less than 6 hrs = stressing out their bodies and increasing insulin resistance (cause)
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  #8   ^
Old Sun, Mar-12-06, 07:27
Lisa N's Avatar
Lisa N Lisa N is offline
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Plan: Bernstein Diabetes Soluti
Stats: 260/-/145 Female 5' 3"
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Progress: 63%
Location: Michigan
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Quote:
Men getting no more than 6 hours of sleep per night, as well as those getting more than 8 hours of shut eye per night, were at significantly increased risk for developing diabetes, compared to men getting 7 to 8 hours of sleep each night.


These researchers need to go take a look, then, at the amount of sleep that we were getting back in the 50's (average 8-9 hours per night) along with the rates of diabetes. I'll give them a hint; the rates of diabetes were a lot lower back then.
I don't doubt that there is a correlation but once again, correlation does not show causation.
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