Mitchell Jonathan A, Godbole Suneeta, Moran Kevin, Murray Kate, James Peter, Laden Francine, Hipp J Aaron, Kerr Jacqueline, Glanz Karen
1Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA; 2Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; 3Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA; 4Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL; 5School of Psychology and Counseling, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, AUSTRALIA; 6Channing Division of Network Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; 7Department of Environmental Health and Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA; 8Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism Management and Center for Geospatial Analytics, NC State University, Raleigh, NC; 9Perelman School of Medicine and School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2016 Oct;48(10):1950-6. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001000.
This study aimed to determine whether physical activity patterns are associated with sleep later at night and if nighttime sleep is associated with physical activity patterns the next day among adult women.
Women (N = 353) living throughout the United States wore a wrist and a hip accelerometer for 7 d. Total sleep time (TST, hours per night) and sleep efficiency (SE, %) were estimated from the wrist accelerometer, and moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA, >1040 counts per minute, h·d) and sedentary behavior (SB, <100 counts per minute, h·d) were estimated from the hip accelerometer. Mixed-effects models adjusted for age, race, body mass index, education, employment, marital status, health status, and hip accelerometer wear time were used to analyze the data. Follow-up analyses using quantile regression were used to investigate associations among women with below average TST and MVPA and above average SB.
The average age of our sample was 55.5 yr (SD = 10.2 yr). The majority of participants were White (79%) and married (72%), and half were employed full time (49%). The participants spent on average 8.9 and 1.1 h·d in SB and MVPA, respectively, and 6.8 h per night asleep. No associations were observed between MVPA and SB with nighttime TST or SE. There were no associations between nighttime TST and SE with MVPA or SB the next day. The findings were the same in the quantile regression analyses.
In free-living adult women, accelerometry-estimated nighttime sleep and physical activity patterns were not associated with one another. On the basis of our observational study involving a sample of adult women, higher physical activity will not necessarily improve sleep at night on a day-to-day basis (and vice versa).
本研究旨在确定身体活动模式是否与成年女性夜间较晚入睡有关,以及夜间睡眠是否与次日的身体活动模式有关。
来自美国各地的353名女性佩戴手腕和臀部加速度计7天。通过手腕加速度计估计总睡眠时间(TST,每晚小时数)和睡眠效率(SE,%),通过臀部加速度计估计中度至剧烈身体活动(MVPA,每分钟>1040计数,小时·天)和久坐行为(SB,每分钟<100计数,小时·天)。使用针对年龄、种族、体重指数、教育程度、就业情况、婚姻状况、健康状况和臀部加速度计佩戴时间进行调整的混合效应模型来分析数据。使用分位数回归进行的后续分析用于研究TST和MVPA低于平均水平且SB高于平均水平的女性之间的关联。
我们样本的平均年龄为55.5岁(标准差 = 10.2岁)。大多数参与者为白人(79%)且已婚(72%),一半为全职工作(49%)。参与者平均每天在SB和MVPA上分别花费8.9小时和1.1小时,每晚睡眠6.8小时。未观察到MVPA和SB与夜间TST或SE之间存在关联。夜间TST和SE与次日的MVPA或SB之间也没有关联。分位数回归分析的结果相同。
在自由生活的成年女性中,通过加速度计估计的夜间睡眠和身体活动模式彼此无关。基于我们对成年女性样本的观察性研究,较高的身体活动不一定会在日常基础上改善夜间睡眠(反之亦然)。