What Do Diabetes and Mental Illness Have In Common?
65
Sleep deprivation
Copyright 2012 - Kris Heeter, Ph.D.
Sleep deprivation in recent years has been shown to be related to both diabetes and mental illness.
In addition, a number of research studies have shown that sleep deprivation can lead to, or contribute to, a number of other health problems. Three of the most widely recognized are: heart disease, weight gain and viral infections. Five very different diseases with one common denominator: the lack of SLEEP.
Sleep Deprivation / Psychiatric Disorder Connection
A 2007 research study out of Harvard and the University of California, published in Current Biology, was able to show that sleep deprivation leads to a rewiring of the brain's emotional circuitry.
The study, using MRI, found that sleep-deprived individuals exhibited a neuronal rewiring in the area of the brain that secretes norepinephrine, a precursor of the hormone adrenaline that triggers fight-or-flight reactions.
The area of the brain that exhibits this rewiring is called the amygdala - a section of the midbrain that decodes emotion. After individuals were subjected to sleep deprivation they had an increased adrenaline "fight-or flight" reaction when exposed to disturbing photos.
According to Matthew Walker, from the University of California, Berkeley, one of the lead researchers on the team finds that:
“The emotional centers of the brain were over 60% more reactive under conditions of sleep deprivation than in subjects who had obtained a normal night of sleep. It is almost as though, without sleep, the brain reverts back to a more primitive pattern of activity, becoming unable to put emotional experiences into context and produce controlled, appropriate responses.
He adds: "...clinical evidence has shown that some form of sleep disruption is present in almost all psychiatric disorders. These findings may offer new mechanisms as to why, and provide novel insights into how we can understand and even treat these disorders at a brain level.”
Sleep deprivation can lead to a heightened emotional disruption that could potential lapse into a mental illness or a psychiatric disorder.
Sleep Deprivation and Diabetes
Metabolic and epidemiological research studies indicate that sleep deprivation may play a role in the increased prevalence of diabetes.
A 2007 review article out of the University of Chicago and Université Libre de Bruxelles, summarized the findings from a number of research studies and concluded that sleep deprivation, weight gain and diabetes risk may involve at least three metabolic pathways.
1. Glucose pathway (affects insulin)
2. Leptin pathway (affects appetite)
3. Ghrelin pathway (affects appetite)
Sleep Deprivation and Glucose Levels
A link between sleep and glucose levels has been known now for nearly 15 years.
Research from the Leiden University Medical Center has shown that blood glucose levels are adversely affected by just a single instance of sleep deprivation. The sensitivity to insulin drops by almost a quarter with only four hours of sleep.
Additional research, however, shows that acute (sudden and rapid) total sleep deprivation can be readily corrected following a sleep recovery period and so the affects of acute sleep deprivation causing long-term adverse effects on glucose tolerance are reported to be unlikely.
What happens though with recurrent partial sleep deprivation? Over the long term, it is believed to alter glucose metabolism that can lead to insulin resistance. Insulin resistance leads to the onset of Type 2 Diabetes. Type 2 diabetes occurs when the body is unable to be sufficiently upregulate beta-cell function to compensate for insulin resistance. When that happens, the result is hyperglycemia (blood sugar levels become too high).
Sleep Deprivation and the Loss of Appetite Control
Research studies have shown that when sleep loss leads to impairments in glucose metabolism, alterations in the circulating levels of the hormones "ghrelin" and and "leptin" also occur.
Leptin and ghrelin are involved in appetite regulation and energy expenditure. Ghrelin increases appetite and decreases energy expenditure. Leptin, on the other hand, does the opposite. It inhibits appetite and increases energy expenditure.
Sleep deprivation increases ghrelin levels and simultaneously decreases leptin hormone levels. The result - sleep deprived individuals may likely experience an increased appetite alongside a decreased energy expenditure (reduced metabolism).
The direction of causality (loss of appetite control and diabetes) cannot be inferred from many of these studies. While sleep deprivation can lead to weight gain the reverse could also be true - i.e., being overweight or obese can lead to an inability to obtain good quality and/or sufficient amounts of sleep.
Research articles of interest on this topic:
- The continuing epidemics of obesity and diabetes in the United States.
JAMA. 2001 Sep 12; 286(10):1195-200.
- Relationships between sleep quality and glucose regulation in normal humans.
Am J Physiol. 1996 Aug; 271(2 Pt 1):E261-70.
- Sleep loss: a novel risk factor for insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes.
J Appl Physiol. 2005 Nov; 99(5):2008-19.
- Leptin levels are dependent on sleep duration: relationships with sympathovagal balance, carbohydrate regulation, cortisol, and thyrotropin.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2004 Nov; 89(11):5762-71.
- Role of sleep duration and quality in the risk and severity of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Arch Intern Med. 2006 Sep 18; 166(16):1768-74.
RELATED HUB:
Top 3 Health Risks Related to Sleep Deprivation
vote upvote downshareprintflag
- Useful (6)
- Funny
- Awesome (3)
- Beautiful (1)
- Interesting (7)
CommentsLoading...
I would have connected some of these dots, but not all. Good info. thanks. vote up
Kris Heeter, You are very smart and know many things. Great hub.
I posted my first hub come see. thanks
Hello Kris! I have included this story in my hub, Weekly Hub Luv in the Magical Land of HubPages #4. Thanks for such an informative article! -homesteadbound
Sleep deprivation certainly causes a lot of problems. Great hub, voted up.
My reaction is where is my pillow? I could fill this little white space with questions, yet you have thankfully provided links - awesome. I like how the article flowed leading through the process easily. However, it has thankfully caused reflection as well. I bookmarked this for the links and some research. Two articles on sleep, so does that hint at your research? Shared with some bp friends and I thank you for this helpful information , , ,
Your detailed and informative hub is vital and needed information for many. Thanks for sharing this interesting and factual information.
Excellent hub with some great information I wan't aware.
This is an excellent hub! Voted up. The link between interrupted sleep and all the problems that may result is very enlightning.
Useful article...Thanks for sharing your ideas on Diabetes and Mental Illness.
Welcome,Kris. I'm 100% positive you are going to be a great asset to Hubpages! Welcome, welcome!!!
Voted up and useful!!
Interesting findings Kris. Your article is full of great information and I too will be sharing this with friends.
Just one night of sleep deprivation can make us feel awful,and lose the ability to concentrate. I imagine that a long period of sleep loss can add up to all kinds of trouble. Very interesting hub.
I am a health enthusiastic and look into my diet and exercise. However, I completely forgot about my sleep. This article opened my eyes and gave me new insight that sleep deprivation can actually affect me in so many ways. I need to work in this direction and sleep more. Thanks for the excellent article.
fascinating...before I was diagnosed with diabetes I had terrible nightmares and would awake shaking and in panic..it turned out that my blood sugar level was spiking in the middle of the night. Now that I'm on metaformin and a sugar free diet, the symptoms largely disappeared. Very good Hub--and thank you for visiting my gallery!
Wow, what an observation! And it really makes sense. I did not know that lack of sleep was connected with diabetes, but I did know that it was connected with weight gain and obesity, which is closely related to diabetes. Great article ... voted all the up's but funny.
As a diabetic who is sleep deprived this was valuable information. Thanks
Yes, I believe it. Lack of sleep causes weight gain. Without enough sleep, the hormonal balance goes all out of wack -- causing unbalanced blood sugars and insulin levels.
This is a great hub for eveyone to read, and the information might help you or a friend.
Thanks,
Bobbi


























susan54 Level 4 Commenter 6 months ago
Kris Heeter, What a great hub full of facts I had no idea of the conection.Vote up!!
come over and check out my flattop haircut hub