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. 2016 Mar;39(3):e40-1.
doi: 10.2337/dc15-2214. Epub 2016 Jan 19.

Two Nights of Recovery Sleep Reverses the Effects of Short-term Sleep Restriction on Diabetes Risk

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Two Nights of Recovery Sleep Reverses the Effects of Short-term Sleep Restriction on Diabetes Risk

Josiane L Broussard et al. Diabetes Care. 2016 Mar.
No abstract available

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Effects of normal sleep (black bars), sleep restriction (red bars), and recovery sleep (gray bars) on insulin sensitivity (A), acute insulin response to glucose (B), and disposition index (C). The disposition index is insulin sensitivity × acute insulin response and is a marker of diabetes risk. Data are mean ± SEM. Overall P values for sleep condition were P = 0.003 for insulin sensitivity, P = 0.19 for acute insulin response to glucose, and P = 0.047 for disposition index. The effects of sleep condition insulin sensitivity, acute insulin response to glucose, and disposition index were assessed using a mixed-effects linear regression model using restricted maximum likelihood with a small-sample adjustment to hypothesis tests using the Kenward and Roger method.

References

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