Individual associations of self-reported sleep duration, sleep quality, chronotype and social jet lag with infectious disease risk.

Estefanía Martínez-Albert, Josef J Bless, Luciana Besedovsky
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Abstract

Sleep deficiency is associated with infectious disease risk. However, little is known about the individual roles of different aspects of sleep, including sleep duration, sleep quality, sleep timing (assessed by chronotype) and sleep regularity (in the form of social jet lag) in this context. Here, we examined associations of the probability of reporting a cold or other infections with self-reported sleep duration, sleep quality and chronotype in a sample of 642 adults, and with social jet lag in a subsample of 274 adults. We found that short (≤ 6 h) and long sleepers (≥ 9 h) were more likely to report a cold in the past 30 days than average sleepers (7-8 h). Also, individuals with a definite evening chronotype were more likely to report a cold in the past 30 days than those with an intermediate chronotype, even when controlling for sleep duration. Finally, social jet lag was dose-dependently associated with the risk of reporting a cold in the past 12 months, independently of sleep duration, sleep quality and chronotype. No associations were found with sleep quality or with infections other than colds. The findings show that different aspects of sleep are independently associated with incidence of reported colds.This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Circadian rhythms in infection and immunity'.

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自我报告的睡眠时间、睡眠质量、生物钟和社交时差与传染病风险的个体关联
睡眠不足与传染病风险有关。然而,在这种情况下,人们对睡眠不同方面的个体作用知之甚少,包括睡眠持续时间、睡眠质量、睡眠时间(以时型评估)和睡眠规律(以社交时差的形式)。在这里,我们研究了642名成人样本中报告感冒或其他感染的可能性与自我报告的睡眠时间、睡眠质量和生物钟类型之间的关系,以及274名成人样本中社交时差的关系。我们发现,短睡眠者(≤6小时)和长睡眠者(≥9小时)在过去30天内比平均睡眠者(7-8小时)更容易报告感冒。此外,即使在控制睡眠时间的情况下,具有明确的夜间睡眠类型的个体在过去30天内比具有中等睡眠类型的个体更容易报告感冒。最后,社交时差与过去12个月报告感冒的风险呈剂量依赖性,与睡眠时间、睡眠质量和生物钟无关。没有发现与睡眠质量或感冒以外的感染有关。研究结果表明,睡眠的不同方面与报告的感冒发病率独立相关。这篇文章是西奥·墨菲会议议题“感染和免疫的昼夜节律”的一部分。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
1.60%
发文量
365
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The journal publishes topics across the life sciences. As long as the core subject lies within the biological sciences, some issues may also include content crossing into other areas such as the physical sciences, social sciences, biophysics, policy, economics etc. Issues generally sit within four broad areas (although many issues sit across these areas): Organismal, environmental and evolutionary biology Neuroscience and cognition Cellular, molecular and developmental biology Health and disease.
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