Light exposure differs by sex in the US, with females receiving less bright light

Danielle A. Wallace
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Abstract

Light is the primary entraining cue for the circadian system and has other, non-circadian, effects on health. Sex differences in light exposure patterns could drive sex differences in health outcomes. Real-world light exposure (measured with wrist-worn ActiGraph GT3X+) was investigated in the 2011–2014 U.S.-based National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) with metrics reflecting duration in and timing of exposure at different light levels. Sex differences were tested using two-sample t-tests and linear regression models. Occupational and physical activity-related factors were also explored as contributing factors using linear regression models adjusted for age, season, and race/ethnicity. 11,314 NHANES participants (age range: 3–80+, 52.2% females) were included in the analysis. The results show males spending approximately 52% more time in bright light than females, with this sex difference beginning in childhood. While further research is needed, these findings may be due to sex differences in indoor vs. outdoor activities.

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在美国,不同性别的人接受的光照不同,女性接受的光照较少
光是昼夜节律系统的主要引导线索,并对健康有其他非昼夜节律的影响。光照模式的性别差异可能导致健康结果的性别差异。2011-2014年美国国家健康与营养调查(NHANES)调查了真实世界的光暴露(通过腕带ActiGraph GT3X+测量),其指标反映了在不同光水平下暴露的持续时间和时间。性别差异采用双样本t检验和线性回归模型进行检验。职业和体育活动相关的因素也被探讨作为影响因素使用线性回归模型调整年龄,季节,和种族/民族。分析纳入了11,314名NHANES参与者(年龄范围:3-80岁以上,52.2%为女性)。结果显示,男性在明亮光线下的时间比女性大约多52%,这种性别差异从童年就开始了。虽然还需要进一步的研究,但这些发现可能是由于室内和室外活动的性别差异。
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