By Jasminee Sahoye

People with late bedtimes are more likely to develop diabetes and other health problems than early birds, researchers found.
They say the health risks stayed the same even for “night owls” who got the same amount of sleep as early risers.
Many night owls don’t get enough sleep because they go to bed late but still need to wake up early in the morning, said the study’s senior author, Dr. Nan Hee Kim, an endocrinologist at Korea University Ansan Hospital.
“These results support the importance of circadian rhythms in metabolic regulation,” Kim is quoted by Live Science.
A total of 1,620 people between the ages of 47 and 59 participated in the study. They answered questions about their sleep-wake cycles, sleep quality and lifestyle habits, such as how often they exercised. They also gave blood samples and underwent body scans that assessed their body’s fat and lean mass.
The researchers grouped the participants based on their responses; there were 480 morning people, 95 evening people and 1,045 people classified as neither.
The researchers found the evening people were more likely than the early risers to have poor sleep quality and unhealthy behaviors such as smoking, sedentary lifestyles and eating late at night, Kim said. The night owls also tended to be younger but were more likely to have high levels of body fat and triglycerides, or fats in their blood, than early risers.
The people who stayed up late were 1.7 times more likely to have Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome, which is a set of symptoms – including high blood pressure, high blood sugar levels, too much abdominal fat and abnormal cholesterol levels – that can occur together and increase a person’s risk of cardiovascular disease or diabetes.
They were 3.2 times more likely to have sarcopenia (muscle loss) compared with morning people, which was independent of how much sleep they got and their other lifestyle factors, Kim said.
However, several gender differences emerged. Male night owls had a 2.9-fold increased risk of diabetes and a 3.8-fold increased risk of sarcopenia. But female night owls had only a 2.2-fold increased risk of metabolic syndrome, a cluster of factors that raise the risk of heart disease, stroke and diabetes, the researchers found.
“Considering evening type is more prevalent in the younger age groups, these findings are (an_ important major health issue,” Kim said.
A person’s biological clock is largely determined by genetics, age, sex and sleeping environment but it can be modified by external or internal cues, such as light, exercise and eating behavior, Kim said.
Night owls keen on an earlier bedtime can avoid exposure to lights late at night and take melatonin, a natural chemical that helps people sleep, Kim said.
Another study by researchers at Washington State University created a laboratory experiment that simulates how sleep loss affects critical aspects of decision making in high-stakes, real-world situations. Their results provide a new understanding of how going without sleep for long periods can lead doctors, first responders, military personnel and others in a crisis situation to make catastrophic decisions.
The data show that no matter how hard a person wants to make the right choice, sleep loss does something to the brain that simply prevents it from effectively using feedback. The study provides a new tool for investigating how sleep deprivation produces decision errors in real-life situations where information emerges over time.
People in high-stakes environments are held accountable for their actions when they are fatigued just like everyone else, the researchers said, adding we now know that when someone is sleep-deprived their brain simply can’t process feedback from their actions and changing circumstances.