Looking beyond sleep duration in understanding obesity risk in adolescents: the role of circadian timing and misalignment on adolescent dietary outcomes, physical activity, and body mass index.

Kara McRae Duraccio, Lindsey Lee, Isabella D Wright, Sarah Kamhout, Nathan Boris, Victoria Zhang, Isaac Wilkins
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Abstract

Study objectives: This study evaluated the differences in obesity-related outcomes across multiple adolescent sleep health domains, including circadian misalignment (CM), circadian timing, and sleep duration.

Methods: 53 adolescents (aged 14-18; body mass index [BMI] percentile < 95%; 53.7% female) completed a cross-sectional study that included baseline assessment of height; weight; demographics; and 10 days assessment of sleep, physical activity, and dietary outcomes. Sleep duration, sleep timing, and physical activity data were collected from all participants using wrist-worn and waist-worn actigraphs. Dietary intake was measured using the Automated Self-Administered 24 Hours dietary recalls on 3 randomized days. Circadian timing was measured using dim-light melatonin onset (DLMO), and CM was calculated as the distance of time between DLMO and the average sleep onset time. Participants were categorized into groups (early vs late circadian timing, aligned vs misaligned circadian timing, and adequate sleep vs short sleep), and differences in dietary outcomes, physical activity, and BMI were analyzed using t-tests.

Results: Adolescents with later DLMO (M = 21:30 ± 1:11) had 0.63 higher BMI and 0.47% less averaged daily percent fat consumption than adolescents with early DLMO. Adolescents with CM (M = 1:42 ± 1:06) consumed 451.77 more averaged daily kcal consumption compared with those with circadian alignment. No statistically significant differences were found in any obesity-related outcome between sleep duration groups.

Conclusions: Our cross-sectional findings indicate that focusing on sleep timing and circadian alignment, beyond sleep duration, may promote better health outcomes for healthy adolescents. The findings of this study could enhance sleep education and inform clinical models for prevention efforts for pediatric obesity.

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了解青少年肥胖风险不能只看睡眠时间的长短:昼夜节律的时间和错位对青少年饮食结果、体育活动和体重指数的影响。
研究目的:本研究评估了多个青少年睡眠健康领域中与肥胖相关的结果差异,包括昼夜节律失调(CM)、昼夜节律时间和睡眠持续时间。方法:53 名青少年(14-18 岁;身体质量指数[BMI]百分位数 t 检验:与昼夜节律失调较早的青少年相比,昼夜节律失调较晚的青少年(M = 21:30 ± 1:11)的体重指数(BMI)高 0.63,平均每日脂肪消耗百分比低 0.47%。与昼夜节律一致的青少年相比,昼夜节律紊乱的青少年(中=1:42 ± 1:06)平均每天多消耗 451.77 千卡热量。各睡眠时间组之间与肥胖相关的结果均无统计学差异:我们的横断面研究结果表明,除睡眠时间长短外,关注睡眠时间和昼夜节律的调整可促进健康青少年获得更好的健康结果。这项研究的结果可以加强睡眠教育,并为预防小儿肥胖症的临床模式提供参考。
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A life of research on everyday sleep(iness). How openness and inquisitiveness led to a career as a sleep researcher and a broad contribution to sleep science. How did I come to sleep research and stay there? Looking beyond sleep duration in understanding obesity risk in adolescents: the role of circadian timing and misalignment on adolescent dietary outcomes, physical activity, and body mass index. The relationships between wanting to nap, actually napping, and depressed and anxious mood.
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