Obstructive Sleep Apnea Associated With Glucose Homeostasis & Biomarkers in Obese Adults
Notwithstanding previous studies supporting independent associations between obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and prevalence of diabetes, the underlying pathogenesis of impaired glucose regulation in OSA remains unclear. The mechanism was explored to find out linking OSA with prediabetes/diabetes and associated biomarker profiles.
The researchers hypothesized that OSA is associated with distinct alterations in glucose homeostasis and biomarker profiles in subjects with normal (NGM) and impaired glucose metabolism (IGM).
Forty-five severely obese adults (36 women) without certain comorbidities/medications underwent anthropometric measurements, polysomnography, and blood tests. We measured fasting serum glucose, insulin, selected cytokines, and calculated homeostasis model assessment estimates of insulin sensitivity (HOMA-IS) and pancreatic beta-cell function (HOMA-B).
Both increases in apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) and the presence of prediabetes/diabetes were associated with reductions in HOMA-IS in the entire cohort even after adjustment for sex, race, age, and BMI (P=0.003).
In subjects with NGM (n=30), OSA severity was associated with significantly increased HOMA-B (a trend towards decreased HOMA-IS) independent of sex and adiposity. OSA-related oxyhemoglobin desaturations correlated with TNF-alpha (r=-0.76; P=0.001) in women with NGM and with IL-6 (rho=-0.55; P=0.035) in women with IGM (n=15) matched individually for age, adiposity, and AHI.
OSA is independently associated with altered glucose homeostasis and increased basal beta-cell function in severely obese adults with NGM.
The findings suggest that moderate to severe OSA imposes an excessive functional demand on pancreatic beta-cells, which may lead to their exhaustion and impairedsecretory capacity over time. The two distinct biomarker profiles linking sleep apnea with NGM and IGM via TNF-alpha and IL-6 have been discerned in our study to suggest that sleep apnea and particularly nocturnal oxyhemoglobin desaturations are associated with chronic metabolic fluxes and specific cytokine stressors that reflect links between sleep apnea and glucose metabolism.
The study may help illuminate potential mechanisms for glucose dysregulation in OSA, and resolve some controversy over the associations of OSA with TNF-alpha and IL-6 in previous studies.
Tagged with: AHI • Apnea Hypopnea Index • blood test • BMI • diabetes • glucose regulation • insulin • obese adults • Obstructive Sleep Apnea • OSA • Polysomnography • Sleep Apnea
Filed under: Clinical Research • Clinical Trials • Diabetes • Obstructive Sleep Apnea • Polysomnography • Sleep Apnea • Sleep Apnea Effects • Sleep Apnea News • Sleep Apnea Research • Sleep Apnea Study
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!







Leave a Reply