Struggling to sleep can be a double negative for women as it means they also tend to eat more, warned researchers.
Having trouble dropping off and waking up during the night were linked to greater food intake and poorer diet.
Scientists who studied 495 women said those who slept badly ate more fat and sugar, leading to obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease. The findings may be a key reason for the link between bad sleep and bad health, they added.
The academics at Columbia University in New York believe poor sleep alters the way the brain receives hunger signals from the body, triggering the desire to eat or suppressing feelings of being full. Researcher Brooke Aggarwal added: 'Women are particularly prone to sleep disturbances because they often shoulder the responsibilities of caring for children and family, and later because of menopausal hormones.'
For the study in the Journal of the American Heart Association, the women aged 20 to 76 kept a food diary and answered questions about their sleep and diet.