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SLEEPING SWEETLY: How Sleep Deprivation & Obstructive Sleep Apnea Effect Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Ronald J. Green, MD, FCCP, FAASM Diplomate, American Board of Sleep Medicine Sleep Medicine, Pulmonary Disease & Smoking Cessation, The Everett Clinic Associate Medical Director North Puget Sound Center for Sleep Disorders Everett, WA 425-339-5410; www.ilikesleep.com Pre-test QUESTION 1 • Sleep deprivation in healthy, nondiabetics leads to impaired glucose metabolism 1. True 2. False Pre-test QUESTION 1 • Sleep deprivation in healthy, nondiabetics leads to impaired glucose metabolism 1. True 2. False Pre-test QUESTION 2 • Proposed factors linking obstructive sleep apnea with impairments in glucose metabolism include: 1. Interleukin 6 2. Catecholamines 3. Cortisol 4. 2&3 5. All of the above Pre-test QUESTION 2 • Proposed factors linking obstructive sleep apnea with impairments in glucose metabolism include: 1. Interleukin 6 2. Catecholamines 3. Cortisol 4. 2&3 5. All of the above Chronic sleep deprivation is • Common • Dangerous • Easily recognized • Treatable Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome (OSAS) is • Common • Dangerous • Easily recognized • Treatable Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is • Common • Dangerous • Easily recognized • Treatable I hope to convince you today that OSAS is independently associated with impairments in glucose metabolism & type 2 DM (independent of obesity) OUTLINE • Overview of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) • Case presentation • Effects of sleep restriction & sleep deprivation on glucose metabolism • OSAS’s effects on glucose metabolism and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) • Proposed mechanisms linking OSAS with impairments in glucose metabolism • Effects of treatment of OSAS on type 2 DM Overview of The obstructive sleep apnea syndrome What is the “apnea” in sleep apnea? • Apnea – Cessation of airflow > 10 seconds • Hypopnea – Decreased airflow > 10 seconds associated with: • Arousal from sleep • Oxyhemoglobin desaturation Measures of Sleep Apnea Frequency • Apnea Index – # apneas per hour of sleep • Apnea / Hypopnea Index (AHI) – # apneas + hypopneas per hour of sleep – > 5 considered abnormal in adults Pathophysiology of an obstructive apnea Pathophysiology of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Awake: Small airway + neuromuscular compensation Loss of neuromuscular compensation Sleep Onset + Decreased pharyngeal muscle activity Airway opens Airway collapses Pharyngeal muscle activity restored Apnea Hypoxia & Hypercapnia Hyperventilate: connect hypoxia & hypercapnia Increased ventilatory effort Arousal from sleep Clinical Consequences Obstructive Sleep Apnea Sleep fragmentation, Hypoxia / Hypercapnia excessive daytime sleepiness cardiovascular & metabolic complications Morbidity Mortality Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Most common risk factors • Obesity • Increasing age • Male gender • Anatomic abnormalities of upper airway • Family history of OSAS • Alcohol or sedative use Diagnosis: History • Loud snoring (not all snore) • Nocturnal gasping and choking – Ask bed partner (witnessed apneas) • Automobile or work related accidents • Personality changes or cognitive problems • Risk factors • Excessive daytime sleepiness (often not recognized by patient) • Frequent nocturia Sleep Apnea: Is Your Patient at Risk? NIH Publication, No 95-3803. Diagnosis: Physical Examination • Upper body obesity / thick neck > 17” males > 16” females • Hypertension • Obvious airway abnormality Exam: Oropharynx Physical Examination Guilleminault C et al. Sleep Apnea Syndromes. New York: Alan R. Liss, 1978. Why Get a Sleep Study? • Signs and symptoms poorly predict disease severity • Appropriate therapy dependent on severity • Failure to treat leads to: – Increased morbidity – Motor vehicle crashes – Mortality • Help diagnose other causes of daytime sleepiness Polysomnography Treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome Treatment Objectives • Reduce mortality and morbidity – Decrease cardiovascular complications – Reduce sleepiness – Improve metabolic derangements, including type 2 diabetes mellitus • Improve quality of life Therapeutic Approach • Risk counseling – Motor vehicle crashes – Job-related hazards – Judgment impairment • Apnea treatment – Weight loss; avoidance of alcohol & sedatives – CPAP – Oral appliance – Surgery (UPPP) Positive Airway Pressure Positive Airway Pressure Oral Appliance: Mechanics Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) Primary Care Management • Risk counseling • Behavior modification (weight loss, etc) • Monitor symptoms and compliance – Monitor weight and blood pressure – Ask about recurrence of symptoms – Evaluate CPAP use and side effects Sleep Apnea: Is Your Patient at Risk? NIH Publication No.95-3803. CASE PRESENTATION Case Presentation • 34 year old woman with history of morbid obesity, type 2 DM & polycystic ovarian syndrome • Per husband, loud snoring & witnessed apneas at night for yrs • Awakens herself choking/gasping at night and during naps Case Presentation, cont’d • Hypersomnolence for years • Near misses driving due to falling asleep briefly at the wheel • Steady weight gain for years • Drinks one pot coffee daily plus caffeinated soda all day long Case Presentation, cont’d • Medications: metformin • No tobacco or alcohol use • Physical exam: BMI = 48.71 (311 pounds, 5’7” tall); very crowded posterior pharyngeal airway; obese neck Case Presentation, cont’d • Epworth sleepiness scale = 15 (>10 is abnormal) • Fasting glucose (lab draw) 155 • Hg A1C 7.6 • TSH 2.77 Case Presentation, cont’d • IMPRESSION: severe, long standing obstructive sleep apnea syndrome • RECOMMENDATIONS: – Overnight sleep study and titration of CPAP, and initiate CPAP therapy – Risk counseling: driving safety, weight loss Case Presentation: diagnostic sleep study • Apnea/hypopnea index = 136 per hr • 33% of the events caused arousals (45 arousals per hour) • Low oxygen saturation = 63% • 40% of the night spent with oxygen saturations below 90% Case Presentation: diagnostic sleep study Case Presentation, cont’d • Treatment: CPAP • CPAP titration done with resolution of respiratory events and stabilization of oxygen desaturations • Optimal pressure: 15 cm H20 Case Presentation: CPAP titration Case Presentation: Treatment with CPAP • On CPAP at pressure of 15 cm H2O – “It’s just like a whole new world.” – Able to exercise again and has great energy – Excessive Daytime Sleepiness gone (ESS = 5 vs 15 pre-Tx) – 13 pound weight loss in 6 weeks (unable to lose any weight prior to CPAP) – Fasting, morning glucose dropped 15-20 points (from mid150s to low 130s, as low as 127) with no change in medication Effects of sleep restriction & sleep deprivation on glucose metabolism Definition of terms • Insulin resistance: normal amounts of insulin are inadequate to produce a normal drop in blood glucose • Insulin sensitivity: systemic responsiveness to glucose • Glucose intolerance: blood glucose levels are higher than normal, but not high enough to classify as diabetes mellitus • Glucose effectiveness: ability of glucose to mobilize itself independent of an insulin response Sleep restriction & sleep deprivation adversely effect glucose metabolism Effects of sleep restriction on glucose metabolism (no OSAS) • Results of sleep restriction (5.5h vs 8.5h for 14 nights) on healthy, non-diabetic, nonobese subjects (Nedelcheva, et al) • Sleep restriction resulted in: – Reduced oral glucose tolerance – Reduced insulin sensitivity – Modest increase in epinephrine & norepinephrine levels Nedeltcheva, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2009 Sep; 94(9): 3242-50 Effects of sleep fragmentation on glucose metabolism (no OSAS) • Normal, healthy non-diabetics were subjected to sleep fragmentation with auditory & mechanical stimuli for just two nights (Stamatakis & Punjabi) • Results: – Insulin sensitivity decreased – Glucose effectiveness decreased – Morning cortisol levels increased Stamatakis, Chest 2010 Jan; 137(1):95-101 Short sleep duration is associated with development of type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Short sleep duration is associated with development of type 2 DM • Yaggi, et al (Cohort of Mass. Male Aging Study) – Short sleepers (< 6h per night) twice as likely to develop DM vs those sleeping 7-8h per night – Adjusted for age, HTN, waist circum, health status • Gangwisch, et al (Cohort of 1st National Health & Nutrition Examination Survey) – Short sleepers (< 5h per night) were 1.5 times more likely to develop DM vs 7-8h per night Yaggi, Diabetes Care, 2006. Mar; 29(3): 657-61. Gangwisch, Sleep, 2007. Dec 1; 30(12): 1667-73. Effects of sleep restriction & sleep deprivation on appetite (the leptin/ghrelin & obesity link) Leptin and Ghrelin • Peripheral signals (hormones) which regulate food intake • Influenced by sleep restriction • Have a Yin/Yang effect on appetite Danguir, Physiol Behav 1979; 22:735-40. Everson, Sleep, 1989; 12:13-21. Leptin: The Yin effect on appetite • Released from adipocytes (fat cells) • Results in decreased appetite • Levels rapidly rise/fall in response to acute caloric shortage/surplus respectively • Rising/falling levels result in reciprocal changes in hunger (up---less hungry; down--more hungry) Spiegel, Ann Intern Med 2004; 141:846-850. Ghrelin: The Yang effect on appetite • Released from the stomach • Results in increased appetite • Rising/falling levels result in changes in hunger (up---more hungry; down---less hungry) Spiegel, Ann Intern Med 2004; 141:846-850. Leptin and Ghrelin • In healthy, young, non-diabetic men sleep restriction (4 hrs per night for two nights): – – – – – 18% decrease in leptin levels 28% increase in ghrelin levels Increase in hunger by 24% Increase in appetite by 23% Most pronounced was increase in craving for caloriedense, high carbohydrate foods Spiegel, Ann Intern Med 2004; 141:846-850. Leptin and Ghrelin • Obese pts have elevated leptin levels and leptin resistance. Leptin resistance can promote hyperinsulinemia. • OSAS pts have elevated leptin levels which decrease with CPAP treatment Ceddia, FASEB Journal. 2002;16:1163-1176.). Principles & Practice of Sleep Medicine (Kryger, Roth and Dement), 2005, chapter 86, p. 1039. Danguir, Physiol Behav 1979; 22:735-40. Relationship between OSAS and glucose metabolism & development of type 2 DM Relationship between obstructive sleep apnea and type 2 diabetes mellitus Glucose intolerance Insulin resistance Obstructive sleep apnea Obesity Diabetes Mellitus Principles & Practice of Sleep Medicine (Kryger, Roth and Dement), 2005, chapter 86, figure 86-1, page 1036. Association between OSAS and impaired glucose metabolism Association between obstructive sleep apnea and glucose metabolism • Severity of sleep-related hypoxemia correlated with glucose intolerance & insulin resistance • Frequency of nocturnal arousals was independently correlated with degree of insulin resistance (Sleep Heart Health Study) NM Punjabi, Am J Respir Crit Care Med, 2002. B Brooks, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1994. IA Harsch, Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2003. Reduction in insulin sensitivity in OSAS • Punjabi and Beamer – Pts with OSAS had reduction in insulin sensitivity vs normal controls, independent of age, sex, percent body fat – As OSAS severity increased, insulin resistance increased as well – Insulin sensitivity correlated with degree of nocturnal oxygen desaturation Punjabi & Beamer, Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2009 Feb 1; 179(3): 235-40 Impact of OSAS on insulin resistance & glucose tolerance in polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) • Tasali, et al – Women with PCOS & OSAS were • more insulin resistant than PCOS women without OSAS • more likely to have glucose intolerance than PCOS women without OSAS – Severity of OSAS • highly significant predictor of fasting glucose & insulin levels • Highly correlated with insulin resistance & glucose tolerance Findings were all controlled for BMI, age & ethnicity Tasali E, et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2008 Oct; 93 (10): 3878-84 Association between OSAS and type 2 DM (unrelated to obesity) Studies linking OSAS to type 2 DM • In Nurses’ Health Study, women who snored regularly had double the relative risk of developing type 2 DM (adjusted for age & BMI) • Habitual snoring in Swedish men associated with higher incidence of DM over 10 yr period WK Al Delaimy, Am J Epidemiol 2002. A Elmasry, J Intern Ded, 2000. Studies linking OSAS to type 2 DM • Wisconsin Sleep Cohort (cross-sectional, longitudinal study) – Adjusted for age, sex & body habitus – 15% of subjects with AHI >15 had type 2 DM vs 3% of subjects with AHI < 5 Reichmuth, Am J Resp Crit Care Med, 2005. Dec 15; 172(12):1590-5. Studies linking OSAS to type 2 DM • Ronksely, et al – Prevalence of DM increased with increasing OSAS severity, even adjusted for weight & neck circumference – In stratified analysis: relationship was only observed in sleepy patients Ronksley, Thorax 2009; 64(10): 834-9 The proposed causes of impaired glucose metabolism & type 2 DM in OSAS Principles & Practice of Sleep Medicine (Kryger, Roth and Dement), 2005, chapter 86, page 1037. The proposed causes of impaired glucose metabolism & type 2 DM in OSAS Principles & Practice of Sleep Medicine (Kryger, Roth and Dement), 2005, figure 86-2, p. 1038. Hypoxia as a cause of impaired glucose metabolism • 50% decrease in insulin sensitivity within 2 days of rapid ascent from sea level to 4600 m, associated with increases in cortisol & norepinephrine (NE) • 61% decrease in insulin sensitivity in hyperbaric chamber (4300 m altitude), associated with increases in NE & epinephrine levels • Obese mice show increase in insulin levels & worsening glucose tolerance with chronic exposure to intermittent hypoxia J Physiol (Lond) 1997;504.241-249. J Appl Physiol 2001;91.623-631. J Physiol 2003; 552: 253-264. Sleep disruption as a cause of impaired glucose metabolism • Sleep restriction (4 hrs/night x 6 nights) in healthy men: 30% drop in glu effectiveness (pre vs post sleep restriction was same as difference between non-diabetic vs diabetic patients under normal conditions) • Sleep Heart Health Study: arousal frequency correlated with insulin resistance Lancet 1999;354.1435-1439. The Sympathetic Nervous System • OSAS patients have elevated sympathetic tone during both wake & sleep which decreases with CPAP therapy • Sympathetic stimulation increases muscle glycogenolysis & hepatic glucose output • Sympathetic stimulation promotes lipolysis & free fatty acid release, which can induce insulin resistance Acta Physiol Scand 2003;177,385-90. Diabetologia 2000; 43:533-549. Proc Assoc Am Physicians 1999; 111: 241-248. Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis • Partial & total sleep deprivation increase plasma cortisol levels by 37% & 45% respectively on the following evening • In animals, hypoxia & hypercapnia stimulate glucagon & glucocortocoid production, leading to insulin resistance & glucose intolerance Sleep 1997; 20:865-870. Lancet 1999;354.1435-1439. J Physiol 1976; 261: 271-283. J Physiol 1977; 269: 131-154. Inflammatory mediators • IL-6 (interleukin 6) • TNF-alpha (tumor necrosis factor) IL-6 (interleukin 6) • Is an inflammatory mediator released (in part) by subcutaneous adipose tissue • Serum levels correlate with insulin resistance • Higher levels increase risk of type 2 DM • Levels increase with altitude hypoxia • OSAS pts have higher levels than controls • 1 month of CPAP decreased IL-6 levels Kern, Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 2001; 280:E745-E751. Fernandez-Real, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2001;86:1154-1159. Pradham, JAMA 2001; 286: 327-334. Klausen, Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol 1997; 76: 480-482. Hartmann, Cytokine 2000; 12:246-252. Yokoe, Circulation 2003; 107: 1129-1134. Vgontzas, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000; 85:1151-1158. TNF-alpha • Important role in development of insulin resistance by antagonizing insulin action • OSAS pts have higher levels than controls • Further work is needed in this area Vgontzas, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000; 85:1151-1158. Liu, J Tongji Med Univ 2000;20: 200-202. OSAS treatment with CPAP improves glucose metabolism & diabetic control OSAS treatment with CPAP improves diabetic control • CPAP improves glucose metabolism – OSAS with AHI > 20 – Looked at insulin sensitivity before then after 2 days & 3 months on CPAP – Significant improvement in insulin sensitivity at 2 days and remained at 3 months – Biggest change in less obese pts (BMI < 30) IA Harsch, Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2003. OSAS treatment with CPAP improves diabetic control • In type 2 diabetics with OSAS, glucose levels during sleep are lower & more stable with CPAP treatment – – – – Glucose measured every 5 min during sleep Baseline vs after 41d on average on CPAP No change in meds or diet Mean sleeping glucose dropped from 122 to 103 A Dawson, Journal Clinical Sleep Medicine 2008. OSAS treatment with CPAP improves diabetic control • CPAP improves glycemic control – Retrospective analysis, no change in DM meds – Average AHI = 53 per hour – HgA1C dropped from 7.8 to 7.3 (p<0.001) Hassaballa, Sleep Breath, 2005. Dec; 9(4): 176-80. In summary: Review of the case presentation • 34 year old woman with type 2 DM & morbid obesity, diagnosed with OSAS • AHI = 136 & low oxygen saturation = 63% • Treated with CPAP at 15 cm H2O • Daytime symptoms resolved • Fasting, morning glucose dropped 15-20 points (from mid-150s to low 130s, as low as 127) with no change in medication IN CONCLUSION Chronic sleep deprivation, OSAS and type 2 diabetes mellitus are • • • • Dangerous Common Easily recognized Treatable • Inter-related Think about and ask about symptoms of OSAS in your patients with • Obesity • Impaired glucose tolerance • Type 2 DM The ultimate goal: