Chaput J-P, Després J-P, Bouchard C, Tremblay A
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, CanadaQuebec Heart Institute, Hôpital Laval Research Center, Hôpital Laval, Quebec City, Quebec, CanadaHuman Genomics Laboratory, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USADivision of Kinesiology, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.
Clin Obes. 2011 Aug;1(4-6):141-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1758-8111.2011.00027.x. Epub 2011 Nov 11.
What is already known about this subject • The evidence that short sleep duration is another determinant of obesity is accumulating. • Lack of sleep has been reported to constitute a metabolic stressor, with increased cortisol concentrations as the end product. What this study adds • This is the first study to show that short sleep duration is associated with a preferential increase in abdominal adiposity in adults.
The aim of this 6-year longitudinal study was to verify whether short sleep duration preferentially increases abdominal adiposity in adults. A total of 276 adults, aged 18-64 years, from the Quebec Family Study were available for this study. Anthropometric measurements (body mass index and waist circumference), self-reported sleep duration and several covariates were assessed. A regression equation derived from the changes in body mass index and waist circumference of normal- and long-duration sleepers (reference category, ≥ 7 h of sleep per night, n = 233) was used to predict the change in waist circumference of short-duration sleepers (≤6 h of sleep per night, n = 43). Additionally, the influence of sleep duration on waist circumference changes was modelled by using linear regression in both sleep duration groups, adjusting for changes in body mass index and other covariates. We observed that measured (actual) changes in waist circumference were significantly greater than predicted changes (mean ± SEM: 3.41 ± 0.53 vs. 2.69 ± 0.51 cm, respectively, P < 0.05), implying that short-duration sleepers had an excess of abdominal fat accumulation over the 6-year follow-up period. After controlling for the changes in total adiposity as measured by body mass index, only short-duration sleepers gained more abdominal adiposity over 6 years. The present study provides evidence that short sleep duration is associated with preferential increases in abdominal adiposity in adults. This finding is of particular concern because abdominal adiposity is correlated with a number of metabolic anomalies.
关于该主题已知的信息 • 短睡眠时间是肥胖的另一个决定因素,这方面的证据正在不断积累。 • 据报道,睡眠不足构成一种代谢应激源,最终导致皮质醇浓度升高。本研究的新增内容 • 这是第一项表明短睡眠时间与成年人腹部肥胖优先增加有关的研究。
这项为期6年的纵向研究旨在验证短睡眠时间是否会优先增加成年人的腹部肥胖。来自魁北克家庭研究的276名年龄在18 - 64岁之间的成年人参与了本研究。评估了人体测量指标(体重指数和腰围)、自我报告的睡眠时间以及几个协变量。使用从正常睡眠时间和长睡眠时间者(参照组,每晚睡眠≥7小时,n = 233)的体重指数和腰围变化得出的回归方程来预测短睡眠时间者(每晚睡眠≤6小时,n = 43)的腰围变化。此外,通过对两个睡眠时间组进行线性回归,在调整体重指数变化和其他协变量的情况下,模拟睡眠时间对腰围变化的影响。我们观察到,腰围的实测(实际)变化显著大于预测变化(分别为均值±标准误:3.41±0.53与2.69±0.51厘米,P < 0.05),这意味着在6年的随访期内,短睡眠时间者腹部脂肪堆积过多。在控制了体重指数所测量的总体脂肪量变化后,只有短睡眠时间者在6年中腹部肥胖增加更多。本研究提供了证据表明短睡眠时间与成年人腹部肥胖优先增加有关。这一发现尤其令人担忧,因为腹部肥胖与多种代谢异常相关。