4.7 Article

Determinants of Shortened, Disrupted, and Mistimed Sleep and Associated Metabolic Health Consequences in Healthy Humans

Journal

DIABETES
Volume 64, Issue 4, Pages 1073-1080

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db14-1475

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. Swedish Brain Foundation
  3. Swedish Society of Medicine
  4. Erik, Karin och Gosta Selander Foundation
  5. Magnus Bergvall Foundation
  6. Turing Foundation
  7. Tore Nilsson Foundation
  8. Novo Nordisk Foundation (Denmark)
  9. AFA Insurance (Sweden)
  10. Ake Wiberg Foundation (Sweden)
  11. Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF14OC0009349] Funding Source: researchfish

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Recent increases in the prevalence of obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in modern societies have been paralleled by reductions in the time their denizens spend asleep. Epidemiological studies have shown that disturbed sleepcomprising short, low-quality, and mistimed sleepincreases the risk of metabolic diseases, especially obesity and T2DM. Supporting a causal role of disturbed sleep, experimental animal and human studies have found that sleep loss can impair metabolic control and body weight regulation. Possible mechanisms for the observed changes comprise sleep loss-induced changes in appetite-signaling hormones (e.g., higher levels of the hunger-promoting hormone ghrelin) or hedonic brain responses, altered responses of peripheral tissues to metabolic signals, and changes in energy intake and expenditure. Even though the overall consensus is that sleep loss leads to metabolic perturbations promoting the development of obesity and T2DM, experimental evidence supporting the validity of this view has been inconsistent. This Perspective aims at discussing molecular to behavioral factors through which short, low-quality, and mistimed sleep may threaten metabolic public health. In this context, possible factors that may determine the extent to which poor sleep patterns increase the risk of metabolic pathologies within and across generations will be discussed (e.g., timing and genetics).

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