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OBJECTIVE: Short-term partial sleep restriction results in glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. The purpose of this study was to assess the long-term relationship between sleep duration and the incidence of clinical diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A cohort of men from the Massachusetts Male Aging Study without diabetes at baseline (1987-1989) were followed until 2004 for the development of diabetes. Average number of hours of sleep per night was grouped into the following categories: 8 h. Incidence rates and relative risks (RRs) were calculated for the development of diabetes in each sleep duration category. Those reporting 7 h of sleep per night served as the reference group. Multivariate analysis was performed using Poisson regression. RESULTS: Men reporting short sleep duration (8 h of sleep per night) were more than three times as likely to develop diabetes over the period of follow-up. Elevated risks remained essentially unchanged after adjustment for age, hypertension, smoking status, self-rated health status, education, and waist circumference (RR 1.95 95% CI 0.95-4.01 for 8 h). RRs were altered considerably for the two extreme sleep groups when adjusted for testosterone (1.51 0.71-3.19 for 8 h), suggesting that the effects of sleep on diabetes could be mediated via changes in endogenous testosterone levels. CONCLUSIONS: Short and long sleep durations increase the risk of developing diabetes, independent of confounding factors. Sleep duration may represent a novel risk factor for diabetes.
Yaggi et al. (Wed,) studied this question.