Chrononutrition patterns and their association with body weight: Differences across multiple chronotypes

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q4 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Endocrinologia Diabetes Y Nutricion Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.endien.2024.12.006
Giovana Longo-Silva , Renan Serenini , Anny Pedrosa , Márcia Lima , Larissa Soares , Júlia Melo , Risia Menezes
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Abstract

Introduction

In recent years, the focus of research on obesity and its management has expanded beyond traditional dietary factors to include the timing of food intake – in relation to the body's circadian rhythms – known as chrononutrition. However, chrononutrition patterns remain largely unexplored in low-medium income countries. Our study aimed to investigate the association between chrononutrition patterns and BMI.

Material and methods

Utilizing data from the virtual Survey SONAR-Brazil (n = 2137,18–65 y), we defined the following chrononutrition patterns: 1. The clock time of the first, mid, and last eating events; 2. Morning and evening latencies (from wake-up time until the first eating event, and from the last eating event until bedtime); and 3. Eating window. Linear regression analyses assessed associations between chrononutrition variables and BMI. Quantile regression and restricted cubic splines were used to explore distributional correlations and association shapes.

Results

Among all participants, BMI increased with each additional hour of the first eating event (β = 0.17; 95% CI, 0.05,0.29; P = 0.005), morning latency (β = 0.27; 95% CI, 0.12,0.42; P < 0.001), and eating midpoint (β = 0.21; 95% CI, 0.05,0.38; P = 0.01) and the effect was even stronger with higher BMI percentiles. There was no effect of eating times among intermediate and late chronotypes. However, among early types, positive associations were seen between the BMI and the timing of the first eating event, morning latency, and eating midpoint, as well as a negative association with evening eating.

Conclusions

Our findings suggest that delaying the first eating event, the eating midpoint, and extending morning latency are associated with higher BMI, particularly in early chronotypes. These results highlight the importance of aligning eating patterns with chronotypes and support personalized dietary recommendations.
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时间营养模式及其与体重的关系:不同时间类型的差异。
近年来,肥胖及其管理的研究重点已经超越了传统的饮食因素,包括食物摄入的时间-与身体的昼夜节律有关-被称为时间营养。然而,中低收入国家的时间营养模式在很大程度上仍未得到探索。我们的研究旨在调查时间营养模式与BMI之间的关系。材料和方法:利用虚拟调查SONAR-Brazil (n=2137,18-65 y)的数据,我们定义了以下时间营养模式:进餐的第一、中、末的时钟时间;2. 早晚潜伏期(从起床时间到第一次进食,从最后一次进食到就寝时间);和3。吃窗口。线性回归分析评估了时间营养变量与BMI之间的关系。分位数回归和限制三次样条用于探索分布相关性和关联形状。结果:在所有参与者中,BMI随着第一次进食活动的每增加一小时而增加(β=0.17;95% ci, 0.05,0.29;P=0.005),晨间潜伏期(β=0.27;95% ci, 0.12,0.42;结论:我们的研究结果表明,延迟第一次进食事件、进食中点和延长早晨潜伏期与较高的BMI有关,特别是在早期睡眠类型中。这些结果强调了使饮食模式与生物钟类型保持一致的重要性,并支持个性化的饮食建议。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
10.50%
发文量
99
期刊介绍: Endocrinología, Diabetes y Nutrición is the official journal of the Spanish Society of Endocrinology and Nutrition (Sociedad Española de Endocrinología y Nutrición, SEEN) and the Spanish Society of Diabetes (Sociedad Española de Diabetes, SED), and was founded in 1954. The aim of the journal is to improve knowledge and be a useful tool in practice for clinical and laboratory specialists, trainee physicians, researchers, and nurses interested in endocrinology, diabetes, nutrition and related disciplines. It is an international journal published in Spanish (print and online) and English (online), covering different fields of endocrinology and metabolism, including diabetes, obesity, and nutrition disorders, as well as the most relevant research produced mainly in Spanish language territories. The quality of the contents is ensured by a prestigious national and international board, and by a selected panel of specialists involved in a rigorous peer review. The result is that only manuscripts containing high quality research and with utmost interest for clinicians and professionals related in the field are published. The Journal publishes Original clinical and research articles, Reviews, Special articles, Clinical Guidelines, Position Statements from both societies and Letters to the editor. Endocrinología, Diabetes y Nutrición can be found at Science Citation Index Expanded, Medline/PubMed and SCOPUS.
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