Coordinated human sleeping brainwaves map peripheral body glucose homeostasis
Adult
diabetes
autonomic nervous system
heart rate variability
slow oscillations
610
Electroencephalography
Brain Waves
Article
sleep spindles
glycemia
Glucose
insulin resistance
616
NREM sleep
Humans
Homeostasis
Sleep
DOI:
10.1016/j.xcrm.2023.101100
Publication Date:
2023-07-07T14:29:14Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Insufficient sleep impairs glucose regulation, increasing the risk of diabetes. However, what it is about the human sleeping brain that regulates blood sugar remains unknown. In an examination of over 600 humans, we demonstrate that the coupling of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep spindles and slow oscillations the night before is associated with improved next-day peripheral glucose control. We further show that this sleep-associated glucose pathway may influence glycemic status through altered insulin sensitivity, rather than through altered pancreatic beta cell function. Moreover, we replicate these associations in an independent dataset of over 1,900 adults. Of therapeutic significance, the coupling between slow oscillations and spindles was the most significant sleep predictor of next-day fasting glucose, even more so than traditional sleep markers, relevant to the possibility of an electroencephalogram (EEG) index of hyperglycemia. Taken together, these findings describe a sleeping-brain-body framework of optimal human glucose homeostasis, offering a potential prognostic sleep signature of glycemic control.
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CITATIONS (12)
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