Sivertsen Børge, Pallesen Ståle, Sand Liv, Hysing Mari
Division of Mental Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Kalfarveien 31, Bergen 5018, Norway.
BMC Pediatr. 2014 Aug 15;14:204. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-14-204.
The aim of this study was to examine the association between body mass index (BMI) and sleep duration, insomnia and symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in adolescents.
Data were taken from a large population based study of 9,875 Norwegian adolescents aged 16-19. BMI was calculated from the self-reported body weight and categorized according to recommended age and gender specific cut offs for underweight, overweight and obesity. Detailed sleep parameters (sleep duration, insomnia, and OSA symptoms) were reported separately for weekdays and weekends. Data were analyzed using Pearson's chi-squared test and ANOVAs for simple categorical and continuous comparisons, and multinomial logistic regressions for analyses adjusting for known confounders.
There was evidence for a curvilinear relationship between BMI and both sleep duration and insomnia for girls, whereas the relationship was linear for boys. Compared to the average weekday sleep duration among adolescents in the normal weight range (6 hrs 29 min), both underweight (5 hrs 48 min), overweight (6 hrs 13 min) and obese (5 hrs 57 min) adolescents had shorter sleep duration. OSA symptoms were linearly associated with BMI. Controlling for demographical factors as well as physical activity did not attenuate the associations. Additional adjustment for depression reduced the association between insomnia and obesity to a non-significant level. The evidence for a link between both underweight and overweight/obesity, and short sleep duration and OSA symptoms remained in the fully adjusted analyses. The associations were generally stronger for girls.
This is one of the first population-based studies to investigate the relationship between sleep and BMI in adolescents while simultaneously controlling for important confounding factors. These findings require further research to investigate the temporal association between weights and sleep problems.
本研究旨在探讨青少年体重指数(BMI)与睡眠时间、失眠及阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)症状之间的关联。
数据取自一项对9875名16 - 19岁挪威青少年的大规模人群研究。BMI根据自我报告的体重计算得出,并根据针对体重过轻、超重和肥胖的推荐年龄及性别特定临界值进行分类。工作日和周末分别报告详细的睡眠参数(睡眠时间、失眠和OSA症状)。使用Pearson卡方检验和方差分析进行简单分类和连续比较分析,并使用多项逻辑回归分析对已知混杂因素进行调整。
有证据表明女孩的BMI与睡眠时间和失眠之间存在曲线关系,而男孩的关系是线性的。与正常体重范围青少年的平均工作日睡眠时间(6小时29分钟)相比,体重过轻(5小时48分钟)、超重(6小时13分钟)和肥胖(5小时57分钟)的青少年睡眠时间都较短。OSA症状与BMI呈线性相关。控制人口统计学因素以及身体活动并未减弱这种关联。对抑郁进行额外调整后,失眠与肥胖之间的关联降至非显著水平。在完全调整分析中,体重过轻与超重/肥胖以及短睡眠时间和OSA症状之间存在关联的证据仍然存在。这些关联在女孩中通常更强。
这是首批在控制重要混杂因素的同时调查青少年睡眠与BMI之间关系的基于人群的研究之一。这些发现需要进一步研究以调查体重与睡眠问题之间的时间关联。