Cross-sectional associations of actigraphy-assessed sleep with dietary outcomes in emerging adults

IF 3.6 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS European Journal of Clinical Nutrition Pub Date : 2024-02-24 DOI:10.1038/s41430-024-01417-9
Jessica McNeil, Nathaniel T. Berry, Jessica M. Dollar, Lenka H. Shriver, Susan P. Keane, Lilly Shanahan, Laurie Wideman
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Abstract

Emerging adults (~18–28 years of age) have a high prevalence of poor sleeping habits and poor diet quality; however, little is known on whether these poor sleeping habits are associated with dietary outcomes in this age group. This study assessed associations between actigraphy-based sleep with energy intake (EI), overall diet quality, and measures of meal timing in emerging adults. Data on 135 emerging adults (age = 19.4 ± 1.3 years; body mass index (BMI) = 26.5 ± 6.9 kg/m2; 58% female; 65% White) from the RIGHT Track Health project were used. Measures included actigraphy-assessed sleep duration, sleep efficiency, sleep timing midpoint, day-to-day sleep duration and sleep timing midpoint variability and combined sleep duration and sleep timing behaviors (early-bed/late-rise, early-bed/early-rise, late-bed/late-rise, late-bed/early-rise); EI (three 24-h dietary recalls), diet quality (Healthy Eating Index 2015 total score) and meal timing outcomes (timing of first and last meal intake, total duration, and midpoint of the eating window). Shorter sleep duration, later sleep timing midpoint and greater sleep efficiency, as well as combined late-bed/late-rise and late-bed/early-rise groups, were associated with lower diet quality. Greater sleep timing midpoint variability was associated with higher EI, and the late-bed/early-rise group had significantly delayed first meal timing. In emerging adults, shorter sleep duration and later sleep timing are associated with lower overall diet quality, and greater sleep timing variability is associated with higher EI. Future research is needed to examine the role of sleep on diet quality and eating habits to identify potential targets for nutritional interventions in this age group.

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运动计法评估的新兴成年人睡眠与饮食结果的横截面关联。
背景/目的:新兴成年人(约 18-28 岁)有较高的睡眠不良习惯和较差的饮食质量;然而,对于睡眠不良习惯是否与这一年龄组的饮食结果相关却知之甚少。本研究评估了以动电图为基础的睡眠与能量摄入(EI)、总体饮食质量以及新兴成人进餐时间测量之间的关联:研究使用了 RIGHT Track Health 项目中 135 名新成人(年龄 = 19.4 ± 1.3 岁;体重指数 (BMI) = 26.5 ± 6.9 kg/m2;58% 女性;65% 白人)的数据。测量指标包括:动电仪评估的睡眠时间、睡眠效率、睡眠时间中点、每日睡眠时间和睡眠时间中点变异性以及睡眠时间和睡眠时间综合行为(早睡/晚起、早睡/早起、晚睡/晚起、晚睡/早起);EI(三次24小时饮食回顾)、饮食质量(2015年健康饮食指数总分)和进餐时间结果(第一餐和最后一餐摄入时间、总持续时间和进餐窗口中点):结果:睡眠时间较短、睡眠时间中点较晚、睡眠效率较高以及晚睡/晚起组和晚睡/早起组与较低的饮食质量有关。睡眠时间中点变化较大与较高的EI有关,晚睡早起组的第一餐时间明显推迟:结论:在新兴成年人中,较短的睡眠时间和较晚的睡眠时间与较低的总体饮食质量有关,而较大的睡眠时间可变性与较高的EI有关。未来的研究需要探讨睡眠对饮食质量和饮食习惯的影响,以确定对这一年龄组进行营养干预的潜在目标。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.60
自引率
2.10%
发文量
189
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (EJCN) is an international, peer-reviewed journal covering all aspects of human and clinical nutrition. The journal welcomes original research, reviews, case reports and brief communications based on clinical, metabolic and epidemiological studies that describe methodologies, mechanisms, associations and benefits of nutritional interventions for clinical disease and health promotion. Topics of interest include but are not limited to: Nutrition and Health (including climate and ecological aspects) Metabolism & Metabolomics Genomics and personalized strategies in nutrition Nutrition during the early life cycle Health issues and nutrition in the elderly Phenotyping in clinical nutrition Nutrition in acute and chronic diseases The double burden of ''malnutrition'': Under-nutrition and Obesity Prevention of Non Communicable Diseases (NCD)
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