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Social jet lag, chronotype and body mass index in 14-17-year-old adolescents

机译:14-17岁青少年的社交时差,表型和体重指数

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The relationship between sleep duration and obesity in adolescents is inconclusive. This may stem from a more complex relationship between sleep and obesity than previously considered. Shifts toward evening preferences, later sleep-wake times and irregular sleep-wake patterns are typical during adolescence but their relationship to body mass index (BMI) has been relatively unexplored. This cross-sectional study examined associations between sleep duration, midpoint of sleep and social jet lag (estimated from 7 days of continuous actigraphy monitoring), and morningness/eveningness with BMIs (BMI z-scores) and waist-to-height ratios in 14-17-year-old adolescents. Seventy participants were recruited from ninth and tenth grades at a public high school. Participants' characteristics were as follows: 74% female, 75% post-pubertal, 36% Hispanic, 38% White, 22% Black, 4% Asian and 64% free/reduced lunch participants with a mean age of 15.5 (SD, 0.7). Forty-one percent of the participants were obese (BMI >= 95th percentile); 54% were abdominally obese (waist-to-height ratio >= 0.5). Multivariable general linear models were used to estimate the association between the independent variables (school night sleep duration, free night sleep duration, midpoint of sleep (corrected), social jet lag and morningness/eveningness) and the dependent variables (BMI z-scores and waist-to-height ratios). Social jet lag is positively associated with BMI z-scores (p < 0.01) and waist-to-height ratios (p = 0.01). Midpoint of sleep (corrected) is positively associated with waist-to-height ratios (p = 0.01). After adjusting for social jet lag, school night sleep duration was not associated with waist-to-height ratios or BMI z-scores. Morningness/eveningness did not moderate the association between sleep duration and BMI z-scores. Findings from this study suggest that chronobiological approaches to preventing and treating obesity may be important for accelerating progress in reducing obesity rates in adolescents.
机译:青少年睡眠时间与肥胖之间的关系尚无定论。这可能是由于睡眠与肥胖之间的关系比以前考虑的更为复杂。在青春期,通常会朝着晚上的偏好,晚些的醒觉时间和不规则的醒觉模式转变,但是它们与体重指数(BMI)的关系尚未得到充分研究。这项横断面研究检查了睡眠持续时间,睡眠中点和社交时差(从连续进行心动描记监测的7天估计)与BMI的早晨/晚上(BMI z得分)和腰高比之间的关联(14) -17岁的青少年。在公立高中从九年级和十年级招募了70名参与者。参与者的特征如下:74%的女性,75%的青春期后,36%的西班牙裔,38%的白人,22%的黑人,4%的亚洲人和64%的自由/减少午餐参与者,平均年龄为15.5岁(SD,0.7 )。百分之四十一的参与者肥胖(BMI> = 95%)。 54%为腹部肥胖(腰高比> = 0.5)。多变量通用线性模型用于估计独立变量(学校夜间睡眠时间,自由夜间睡眠时间,睡眠中点(校正),社交时差和早晨/晚上)与因变量(BMI z得分和腰高比)。社交时差与BMI z评分(p <0.01)和腰高比(p = 0.01)正相关。睡眠中点(校正后)与腰高比呈正相关(p = 0.01)。调整社交时差后,上学的夜间睡眠时间与腰高比或BMI z得分无关。早晨/晚上没有缓解睡眠时间与BMI z评分之间的关​​联。这项研究的结果表明,预防和治疗肥胖症的时间生物学方法可能对加速降低青少年肥胖率的进展很重要。

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