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"Lack of sleep alters hormones, metabolism"
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Topic Started: Jul 18 2012, 02:01 AM (427 Views)
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El Caudillo
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Jul 18 2012, 02:01 AM
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By John Easton Medical Center Public Affairs Chronic sleep loss can reduce the capacity of even young adults to perform basic metabolic functions, such as processing and storing carbohydrates or regulating hormone secretion, report researchers from the University’s medical center in a recent issue of The Lancet.
Cutting back from the standard eight down to four hours of sleep each night produced striking changes in glucose tolerance and endocrine function––changes that resembled the effects of advanced age or the early stages of diabetes––after less than one week.
Although many studies have examined the short-term effects of acute, total sleep deprivation on the brain, this is the first to investigate the impact of chronic, partial sleep loss on the body by evaluating the metabolism and hormone secretion of subjects who were subjected to sleep restriction and after-sleep recovery.
“We found that the metabolic and endocrine changes resulting from a significant sleep debt mimic many of the hallmarks of aging,” said Eve Van Cauter, Research Professor in Medicine and director of the study. “We suspect that chronic sleep loss may not only hasten the onset but could also increase the severity of age-related ailments such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity and memory loss.”
Cutting back on sleep is an extremely common response to the time pressures of modern industrial societies. The average night’s sleep decreased from about nine hours in 1910 to about 7.5 hours in 1975, a trend that continues. Millions of shift workers average less than five hours of sleep per workday. Previous studies, however, have measured only the cognitive consequences of sleep loss.
Van Cauter and colleagues Karine Spiegel and Rachel Leproult chose to focus instead on the physiologic effects of sleep loss, how sleep deprivation alters basic bodily functions such regulating blood-sugar levels, storing energy from food and the production of various hormones.
They followed 11 healthy young men for 16 consecutive nights. The first three nights, the subjects were allowed to sleep for eight hours, from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. The next six nights they slept four hours, from 1 to 5 a.m. The following seven nights they spent 12 hours in bed, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. All subjects received identical diets.
The researchers constantly assessed each volunteer’s wakefulness and heart rate. They performed sleep studies on the last two eight-hour nights, the last two four-hour nights, and the first and last two 12-hour nights. They performed glucose tolerance tests on the fifth day of sleep deprivation and the fifth day of sleep recovery and monitored glucose and hormone levels every 30 minutes on the sixth day of deprivation and of recovery.
They found profound alterations in glucose metabolism, in some situations resembling patients with type-2 diabetes, during sleep deprivation. When tested during the height of their sleep debt, subjects took 40 percent longer than normal to regulate their blood-sugar levels following an injection of glucose. Their ability to secrete insulin decreased by about 30 percent. A similar decrease in acute insulin response is an early marker of diabetes.
The differences were particularly noticeable when the subjects were tested in the morning. “Under sleep-debt conditions, our young, lean subjects would have responded to a morning glucose tolerance test in a manner consistent with current diagnostic criteria for impaired glucose tolerance,” noted the authors. Impaired glucose tolerance also is an early symptom of diabetes.
Sleep deprivation also altered the production and action of other hormones, dampening the secretion of thyroid-stimulating hormone and increasing blood levels of cortisol, especially during the afternoon and evening. Elevated evening cortisol levels are typical of much older subjects and are thought to be related to age-related health problems such as insulin resistance and memory impairment.
All of these abnormalities quickly returned to baseline by the end of the recovery period, when subjects spent 12 hours in bed. In fact, as the subjects spent more than eight hours a night in bed, their laboratory values moved beyond the “normal” or baseline standards, suggesting that even eight hours of sleep do not produce a fully rested state. Young adults may function best after more than eight hours of rest each night.
“While the primary function of sleep may very well be cerebral restoration,” the authors noted, “our findings indicate that sleep loss also has consequences for peripheral function that, if maintained chronically, could have long-term, adverse health effects.”
Funding for this study was supplied by the Research Network on Mind-Body Interactions of the MacArthur Foundation (Chicago), the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Institutes of Health.
http://chronicle.uchicago.edu/991202/sleep.shtml
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Funk
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Jul 18 2012, 08:23 AM
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Damn. I gotta get myself together.
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GenoMann
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Jul 18 2012, 11:42 PM
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I really messed with my brain by listening to the sound track of the Meaning of Life while staying awake for 72 hours. Orientation week on the cheap.
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“A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it.” – G. K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man, 1925
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El Caudillo
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Jul 18 2012, 11:43 PM
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i tried what they said a little while ago myself
didnt quite make ten hours but i felt good
hadnt slept like that in a long time tbh
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Semitic Duwa
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Jul 19 2012, 12:45 AM
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- Funk
- Jul 18 2012, 08:23 AM
Damn. I gotta get myself together.
Same here.
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"I know that elections must be limited only to those who understand that the Arabs are the deadly enemy of the Jewish state, who would bring on us a slow Auschwitz - not with gas, but with knives and hatchets."
-Meir Kahane
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marko
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Jul 19 2012, 12:17 PM
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Great article. Thanks for sharing.
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El Caudillo
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Jul 19 2012, 06:20 PM
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just trying to stock up on my empathy since they tell me that i have none irl
dont know how else to stock up apart from posting on internet fora
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Vega
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Jul 20 2012, 10:09 PM
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They found profound alterations in glucose metabolism, in some situations resembling patients with type-2 diabetes, during sleep deprivation. When tested during the height of their sleep debt, subjects took 40 percent longer than normal to regulate their blood-sugar levels following an injection of glucose. Their ability to secrete insulin decreased by about 30 percent. A similar decrease in acute insulin response is an early marker of diabetes.
The differences were particularly noticeable when the subjects were tested in the morning. “Under sleep-debt conditions, our young, lean subjects would have responded to a morning glucose tolerance test in a manner consistent with current diagnostic criteria for impaired glucose tolerance,” noted the authors. Impaired glucose tolerance also is an early symptom of diabetes.
This could be one reason to why type-2 diabetes has become so common in the world today.
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Toiletman
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Jul 20 2012, 11:04 PM
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- Vega
- Jul 20 2012, 10:09 PM
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They found profound alterations in glucose metabolism, in some situations resembling patients with type-2 diabetes, during sleep deprivation. When tested during the height of their sleep debt, subjects took 40 percent longer than normal to regulate their blood-sugar levels following an injection of glucose. Their ability to secrete insulin decreased by about 30 percent. A similar decrease in acute insulin response is an early marker of diabetes.
The differences were particularly noticeable when the subjects were tested in the morning. “Under sleep-debt conditions, our young, lean subjects would have responded to a morning glucose tolerance test in a manner consistent with current diagnostic criteria for impaired glucose tolerance,” noted the authors. Impaired glucose tolerance also is an early symptom of diabetes.
This could be one reason to why type-2 diabetes has become so common in the world today. No, not really. It can only mean that diabetis is overdiagnosed. Normally, a diabetes diagnosis rests on more than just this one test.
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If you take anything in this forum overly serious, you should really go and see a doctor.
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Vega
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Jul 21 2012, 02:03 PM
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- Toiletman
- Jul 20 2012, 11:04 PM
No, not really. It can only mean that diabetis is overdiagnosed. Normally, a diabetes diagnosis rests on more than just this one test. I think it's a significant risk that a long period of sleep deprivation with a decreased ability to secrete insulin and an impaired glucose tolerance could cause type-2 diabetes if you also otherwise have a predispostion for diabetes (e.g. having close relatives with diabetes).
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Nam
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Jul 27 2012, 10:42 AM
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Thanks , very useful.
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FucЖeveriwon
 ..maybe like sun too, as if these tiny beings loved sunlight so much, they imitated the radiating sun, created their own architecture of sun worship.
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Nam
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Aug 18 2012, 05:58 AM
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They followed 11 healthy young men for 16 consecutive nights. The first three nights, the subjects were allowed to sleep for eight hours, from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. The next six nights they slept four hours, from 1 to 5 a.m. The following seven nights they spent 12 hours in bed, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. All subjects received identical diets.
The researchers constantly assessed each volunteer’s wakefulness and heart rate. They performed sleep studies on the last two eight-hour nights, the last two four-hour nights, and the first and last two 12-hour nights. They performed glucose tolerance tests on the fifth day of sleep deprivation and the fifth day of sleep recovery and monitored glucose and hormone levels every 30 minutes on the sixth day of deprivation and of recovery.
They found profound alterations in glucose metabolism, in some situations resembling patients with type-2 diabetes, during sleep deprivation. When tested during the height of their sleep debt, subjects took 40 percent longer than normal to regulate their blood-sugar levels following an injection of glucose. Their ability to secrete insulin decreased by about 30 percent. A similar decrease in acute insulin response is an early marker of diabetes.
Basically very important statistic data here.
Means, you will only need 5 days to develop a health status of a diabetic person without sufficient sleep. It almost means, ha you can be easier to gain fat than sleep sufficient people by 30-40% after 5 days of sleep deprivation. Everybody who want to conserve your youth should note this paragraph.
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FucЖeveriwon
 ..maybe like sun too, as if these tiny beings loved sunlight so much, they imitated the radiating sun, created their own architecture of sun worship.
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Toiletman
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Aug 18 2012, 06:03 AM
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- Vega
- Jul 21 2012, 02:03 PM
- Toiletman
- Jul 20 2012, 11:04 PM
No, not really. It can only mean that diabetis is overdiagnosed. Normally, a diabetes diagnosis rests on more than just this one test.
I think it's a significant risk that a long period of sleep deprivation with a decreased ability to secrete insulin and an impaired glucose tolerance could cause type-2 diabetes if you also otherwise have a predispostion for diabetes (e.g. having close relatives with diabetes). But atleast in Europe, it's not epidemically significant. May Korea or Japan
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If you take anything in this forum overly serious, you should really go and see a doctor.
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GenoMann
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Aug 19 2012, 04:25 AM
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- Vega
- Jul 20 2012, 10:09 PM
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They found profound alterations in glucose metabolism, in some situations resembling patients with type-2 diabetes, during sleep deprivation. When tested during the height of their sleep debt, subjects took 40 percent longer than normal to regulate their blood-sugar levels following an injection of glucose. Their ability to secrete insulin decreased by about 30 percent. A similar decrease in acute insulin response is an early marker of diabetes.
The differences were particularly noticeable when the subjects were tested in the morning. “Under sleep-debt conditions, our young, lean subjects would have responded to a morning glucose tolerance test in a manner consistent with current diagnostic criteria for impaired glucose tolerance,” noted the authors. Impaired glucose tolerance also is an early symptom of diabetes.
This could be one reason to why type-2 diabetes has become so common in the world today. Calorie thrifty metabolic systems ensure diabetes - due to epigenetic programming. There was a Horizon program on the topic. The BBC, in their infinite wisdom [/end sarcasam] took it off their site.
Indians are usually following all the lifestyle prescriptions that MD's prescribe for their diabetes patients. Unfortunately for them, Indians will continue to get diabetes as their systems are epigenetically programmed to be thrifty through generations of survival in famines. Thrifty epigenetics are a life-saver when food is scarce, but deadly in the increasingly food-rich world of today's India.
I am an epigenetically robust type and have maxed out over 40 BMI before loosing 10 BMI. My epigenetically thrifty middle eastern MD does not understand why I have not died. I have not had the cheek to ask him what the BMI category beyond morbidly obese is called. It would be wrong of me to mock him like that.
Edited by GenoMann, Aug 19 2012, 04:31 AM.
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“A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it.” – G. K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man, 1925
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