Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Diabetes and sleep disorders are linked as both are identified as clinical conditions studied within the framework of Network Physiology [1] and the Human Physiolome maps [2]. Furthermore, chronic sleep loss and sleep disorders are explicitly cited as risk factors that increase the likelihood of developing diabetes [3], [4].
Facts (4)
Sources
Extent and Health Consequences of Chronic Sleep Loss and ... - NCBI ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 2 facts
claimThe Institute of Medicine (US) Committee on Sleep Medicine and Research associates chronic sleep loss and sleep disorders with an increased risk of hypertension, diabetes, obesity, depression, heart attack, and stroke.
claimThe cumulative effects of sleep loss and sleep disorders are associated with an increased risk of hypertension, diabetes, obesity, depression, heart attack, and stroke.
The New Field of Network Physiology: Building the Human ... frontiersin.org 2 facts
claimNetwork Physiology research investigates the pairwise and network interactions of organ systems and sub-systems, and how these interactions manifest in aging, exercise, sports, and various clinical conditions such as concussion, traumatic brain injury, cardiac arrest, sleep and neurodegenerative disorders, diabetes, obesity, maternal-fetal and neonatal care, sepsis, coma, and multiple organ failure.
claimThe Human Physiolome maps are associated with diseases including neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders, sleep and circadian disorders, cancer, diabetes and obesity, concussion and brain trauma, coma, cardiac arrest, sepsis, and multiple organ failure.