(Press-News.org) Boston – Millions of Americans are diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, yet the exact causes of diabetes still puzzle scientists. Now, new research from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) finds that the amount of melatonin a person secretes during sleep may predict their risk of developing type 2 diabetes. The study appears in the April 3, 2013 issue of JAMA.
"This is the first time that an independent association has been established between nocturnal melatonin secretion and type 2 diabetes risk," said Dr. Ciaran McMullan, a researcher in the Renal Division and Kidney Clinical Research Institute at BWH. "Hopefully this study will prompt future research to examine what influences a person's melatonin secretion and what is melatonin's role in altering a person's glucose metabolism and risk of diabetes." Melatonin is a hormone that is produced by the brain and secreted into a person's bloodstream. As melatonin is mainly produced at night, melatonin's blood levels peak during the nightime allowing regulation of circadian rhythm.
For this study, researchers identified 370 women who developed diabetes while taking part in the Nurses' Health Study and 370 control subjects of the same age and race. When the two groups were compared, researchers found the study participants with low levels of nocturnal melatonin secretion had about twice the risk of developing type 2 diabetes than participants with high levels of nocturnal melatonin secretion. The study accounted for other well-established risk factors for diabetes, such as body mass index, family history of diabetes and lifestyle factors including diet, exercise, smoking and sleep duration and still found that melatonin secretion remained a significant risk factor.
###
This research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants DK58845 and HL103607.
Study links diabetes risk to melatonin levels
Low nocturnal melatonin secretion levels are associated with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes
2013-04-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Speaking a tonal language (such as Cantonese) primes the brain for musical training
2013-04-03
Toronto, CANADA – Non-musicians who speak tonal languages may have a better ear for learning musical notes, according to Canadian researchers.
Tonal languages, found mainly in Asia, Africa and South America, have an abundance of high and low pitch patterns as part of speech. In these languages, differences in pitch can alter the meaning of a word. Vietnamese, for example, has eleven different vowel sounds and six different tones. Cantonese also has an intricate six-tone system, while English has no tones.
Researchers at Baycrest Health Sciences' Rotman Research ...
How the worm turns
2013-04-03
###
About the University of Massachusetts Medical School
The University of Massachusetts Medical School, one of the fastest growing academic health centers in the country, has built a reputation as a world-class research institution, consistently producing noteworthy advances in clinical and basic research. The Medical School attracts more than $250 million in research funding annually, 80 percent of which comes from federal funding sources. The mission of the Medical School is to advance the health and well-being of the people of the commonwealth and the world through ...
Tiny grazers play key role in marine ecosystem health
2013-04-03
LAFAYETTE - Tiny sea creatures no bigger than a thumbtack are being credited for playing a key role in helping provide healthy habitats for many kinds of seafood, according to a new study by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and U.S. Geological Survey.
The little crustacean "grazers," some resembling tiny shrimp, are critical in protecting seagrasses from overgrowth by algae, helping keep these aquatic havens healthy for native and economically important species. Crustaceans are tiny to very large shelled animals that include crab, shrimp, and lobster.
The ...
Mineral analysis of lunar crater deposit prompts a second look at the impact cratering process
2013-04-03
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Despite the unimaginable energy produced during large impacts on the Moon, those impacts may not wipe the mineralogical slate clean, according to new research led by Brown University geoscientists.
The researchers have discovered a rock body with a distinct mineralogy snaking for 18 miles across the floor of Copernicus crater, a 60-mile-wide hole on the Moon's near side. The sinuous feature appears to bear the mineralogical signature of rocks that were present before the impact that made the crater.
The deposit is interesting because ...
Sensitive sites: UC Research examines preservation of Southwest archaeology in time of tight budgets
2013-04-03
When surveying in the Upper Basin of the Grand Canyon National Park in April 2011, University of Cincinnati faculty and students discovered a previously unknown 17-room subterranean pueblo that likely dates back to the 12th century.
For UC anthropology graduate student Ryan Washam, that find – in which he took part – helped spark his current research in how federal agencies are conducting archaeological and environmental protection and preservation efforts in a time of tight budgets.
Washam, 23, of Florence, Ky., will present a case study of protection and preservation ...
Review: Few effective, evidence-based interventions to prevent posttraumatic stress disorder
2013-04-03
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. – Millions of adults are exposed to traumatic events each year. Shortly after exposure many experience symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) such as flashbacks, emotional numbing and difficulty sleeping.
Despite this high rate of exposure, little is known about the effectiveness of treatments aimed at preventing and relieving posttraumatic stress symptoms that adults may experience after such events, according to researchers at the RTI-UNC Evidence-based Practice Center.
The article, published online today by the American Journal ...
Puzzle of how spiral galaxies set their arms comes into focus
2013-04-03
MADISON — As the shapes of galaxies go, the spiral disk — with its characteristic pinwheel profile — is by far the most pedestrian.
Our own Milky Way, astronomers believe, is a spiral. Our solar system and Earth reside somewhere near one of its filamentous, swept-back arms. And nearly 70 percent of the galaxies closest to the Milky Way are spirals, suggesting they have taken the most ordinary of galactic forms in a universe with billions of galaxies.
But despite their common morphology, how galaxies like ours get and maintain their characteristic arms has proved to ...
Epileptic seizures can propagate using functional brain networks
2013-04-03
New Rochelle, NY, April 2, 2013—The seizures that affect people with temporal-lobe epilepsy usually start in a region of the brain called the hippocampus. But they are often able to involve other areas outside the temporal lobe, propagating via anatomically and functionally connected networks in the brain. New research findings that link decreased brain cell concentration to altered functional connectivity in temporal-lobe epilepsy are reported in an article in Brain Connectivity, a bimonthly peer-reviewed publication from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article ...
Negative emotions in response to daily stress take a toll on long-term mental health
2013-04-03
Our emotional responses to the stresses of daily life may predict our long-term mental health, according to a new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
Psychological scientist Susan Charles of the University of California, Irvine and colleagues conducted the study in order to answer a long-standing question: Do daily emotional experiences add up to make the straw that breaks the camel's back, or do these experiences make us stronger and provide an inoculation against later distress?
Using data from two national ...
Access to mental health care lacking for children, teens across the US
2013-04-03
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Everyday, news reports detail the impact of the deficiencies in the nation's mental health care services. Even more startling, a survey from the University of Michigan reveals that many adults across the U.S. believe children and teens have extremely limited or no access to appropriate mental health care services.
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation commissioned the National Voices Project to facilitate a five year study to gauge opportunities available for children and teens at the local level in communities across the U.S. Officials at the National Voices ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New take on immunotherapy reinvigorates T cells by blocking uptake of energy-sapping cancer byproducts
How much climate change is in the weather?
Flagship AI-ready dataset released in type 2 diabetes study
Shaking it up: An innovative method for culturing microbes in static liquid medium
Greener and cleaner: Yeast-green algae mix improves water treatment
Acquired immune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) associated with inactivated COVID-19 vaccine CoronaVac
CIDEC as a novel player in abdominal aortic aneurysm formation
Artificial intelligence: a double-edged sword for the environment?
Current test accommodations for students with blindness do not fully address their needs
Wide-incident-angle wideband radio-wave absorbers boost 5G and beyond 5G applications
A graph transformer with boundary-aware attention for semantic segmentation
C-Path announces key leadership appointments in neurodegenerative disease research
First-of-its-kind analysis of U.S. national data reveals significant disparities in individual well-being as measured by lifespan, education, and income
Exercise programs help cut new mums’ ‘baby blues’ severity and major depression risk
Gut microbiome changes linked to onset of clinically evident rheumatoid arthritis
Signals from the gut could transform rheumatoid arthritis treatment
Pioneering research reveals some of the world’s least polluting populations are at much greater risk of flooding fuelled by climate change
UK’s health data should be recognized as critical national infrastructure, says independent review
A 36-gene predictive score of anti-cancer drug resistance anticipates cancer therapy outcomes
Someone flirts with your spouse. Does that make your partner appear more attractive?
Hourglass-shaped stent could ease severe chest pain from microvascular disease
United Nations ratifies framework to protect people on cash app
Oklahoma State basketball team joins the Nation of Lifesavers
Power of aesthetic species on social media boosts wildlife conservation efforts, say experts
Researchers develop robotic sensory cilia that monitor internal biomarkers to detect and assess airway diseases
Could crowdsourcing hold the key to early wildfire detection?
Reconstruction of historical seasonal influenza patterns and individual lifetime infection histories in humans based on antibody profiles
New study traces impact of COVID-19 pandemic on global movement and evolution of seasonal flu
Presenting a Janus channel of membranes for complete oil-and-water separation
COVID-19 restrictions altered global dispersal of influenza viruses
[Press-News.org] Study links diabetes risk to melatonin levelsLow nocturnal melatonin secretion levels are associated with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes