Mediterranean-style diet linked to lower odds of metabolic syndrome in women not getting enough sleep

University of Michigan study reveals the diet may offer benefits for women with inadequate sleep
Previous research has identified that Mediterranean diet adherence and adequate sleep duration are each independently associated with lower risk of metabolic syndrome. And now, a recent study led by University of Michigan School of Public Health researchers looks into their combined effects.
The details
Published in The Journal of Nutrition, a team of researchers from the University of Michigan, Iberoamerican University, King Abdulaziz University, and the National Institute of Public Health of Mexico examined 410 midlife women participating in the Early Life Exposure in Mexico to ENvironmental Toxicants (ELEMENT) study. The women had an average age of 48 years.
The study focused on the alternate Mediterranean diet—a dietary pattern adapted from the traditional Mediterranean diet to account for regional variations in food availability and cultural preferences. This approach is particularly relevant for studying diverse populations, including Mexican women, whose local dietary patterns differ from those of Mediterranean countries.
The alternate Mediterranean diet emphasizes high consumption of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, fish, and healthy fats, with limited intake of red and processed meats. This dietary pattern has been associated with reduced inflammation, improved insulin sensitivity, and better lipid metabolism—all factors that influence metabolic syndrome risk.
Researchers assessed participants' diets using a validated food frequency questionnaire and measured their sleep duration using wrist wearable devices worn continuously for seven days. They then examined whether the combination of diet quality and sleep duration was associated with metabolic syndrome, a group of conditions that increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes.
The researchers say the study's focus on midlife Mexican women is significant from a public health perspective, as metabolic syndrome prevalence in Mexico has risen, affecting an estimated 36.5 million adults. Meanwhile, a 2016 survey of Mexican adults found that 28.5% of those surveyed reported insufficient sleep. Understanding how these two modifiable lifestyle factors interact could inform more effective public health interventions for populations facing disproportionate metabolic disease burden.
The findings
The study found that metabolic syndrome was present in nearly half (49.8%) of participants, and more than half (56.6%) averaged less than seven hours of sleep per night—below the threshold for adequate sleep recommended by health experts.
When researchers analyzed the full group, neither the alternate Mediterranean diet nor sleep duration alone showed a statistically significant association with metabolic syndrome. However, an important pattern emerged when researchers compared women based on sleep duration.
Specifically, among women who slept less than seven hours, on average, per night, those with higher adherence to the alternate Mediterranean diet had 16% lower odds of metabolic syndrome—a result that reached statistical significance. This association was not observed among women who achieved adequate sleep of seven or more hours per night.
Because this was an observational study, the researchers cannot determine whether the alternate Mediterranean diet directly caused the reduction in the odds of metabolic syndrome, or whether other factors may explain the relationship. Timing is important too; since this was a cross-sectional study, researchers could not determine whether sleep and dietary habits preceded the development of metabolic syndrome.
What it means
These findings reveal a potential interaction between sleep and diet in shaping metabolic health outcomes—an important consideration for public health approaches to chronic disease prevention.
“The results suggest that following an alternate Mediterranean dietary pattern may be particularly beneficial for women not getting adequate sleep, though more longitudinal research is needed to establish causation,” said Haneen Bou Ghanem, a PhD student in the Department of Nutritional Science at the University of Michigan School of Public Health and the lead author of the study. “These findings highlight that improving overall diet quality may be one meaningful step women can take to support metabolic health when they aren’t getting enough sleep.”
From a biological perspective, there are some reasons to explain why this interaction might occur. Sleep deprivation is known to dysregulate metabolic pathways, including glucose homeostasis and inflammatory responses. The alternate Mediterranean diet's anti-inflammatory compounds, beneficial fatty acids, and antioxidants may help buffer against some of the metabolic disruptions caused by insufficient sleep—though these mechanisms would need to be confirmed in follow-up studies
The public health implications of these findings go beyond individual lifestyle choices. Both inadequate sleep and poor diet quality are shaped by social and environmental factors—including work schedules, access to healthy foods, income, family responsibilities, and cultural practices. For many midlife women, balancing caregiving, employment, and other demands can make it harder to maintain healthy sleep and nutrition. Effective strategies to prevent metabolic syndrome must address these broader social and structural barriers, not just personal habits.
Understanding how modifiable lifestyle factors like diet and sleep interact to influence metabolic syndrome risk is critical for developing targeted interventions, especially for populations experiencing health inequities. These findings suggest that efforts to reduce metabolic disease burden may need to address multiple lifestyle factors simultaneously rather than focusing on diet or sleep in isolation.
Future longitudinal studies will be important for understanding whether dietary interventions can help mitigate metabolic risk in women experiencing insufficient sleep, and whether addressing barriers to healthy sleep and nutrition can reduce metabolic syndrome disparities.
Additional Authors: Maria M Kofas , Karen E Peterson, Alejandra Cantoral, Abeer Aljahdali, Libni Torres-Olascoaga, Martha M Tellez-Rojo, Erica C Jansen
Study: "Sleep Duration Modifies the Association of the Alternate Mediterranean Diet Score With Metabolic Syndrome in Midlife Women in Mexico." The Journal of Nutrition. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2025.08.023
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