Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, the Netherlands.
Sleep Med. 2019 May;57:43-50. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2019.01.034. Epub 2019 Feb 6.
In recent years, short sleep has been increasingly recognized as a risk factor for obesity. However, current evidence has so far been limited to cross-sectional studies or longitudinal studies using self-reported sleep. Therefore, we explored the directionality of the association between objectively measured sleep and body mass index (BMI).
The study consists of 1031 participants from the general population (52% women, 45-91 years at baseline). Sleep, BMI and waist circumference (WC) were measured twice across a follow-up of six years. BMI and WC were measured at the research center. Total sleep time (TST, hrs), sleep onset latency (SOL, min), sleep efficiency (SE, %) and wake after sleep onset (WASO, min) were estimated by a wrist-worn actigraph. In addition, cross-sectional and longitudinal associations in both directions were explored.
An hour shorter TST was cross-sectionally associated with approximately 0.5 kg/m higher BMI. Longitudinally, longer TST and higher SE were associated with lower BMI (β = -0.75, 95% CI: -1.08, -0.42; β = -0.04, 95% CI: -0.08, -0.01). Conversely, one kg/m higher BMI was prospectively associated with 0.02 h shorter TST (95% CI: -0.03, -0.01), and this association was more pronounced over time. Results from analyses with WC were in line with those of BMI.
This is the first study to explore bidirectionality in the association between objectively measured sleep and BMI in a large population of middle-aged and older adults. Indices of poor sleep were associated with higher and less stable BMI across time. Conversely, a high BMI was associated with a decrease in sleep duration. This confirms that the relation between sleep and body size is bidirectional, and changes in either sleep or BMI are likely to co-occur with changes in health through multiple pathways.
近年来,人们越来越认识到睡眠不足是肥胖的一个风险因素。然而,目前的证据仅限于横断面研究或使用自我报告睡眠的纵向研究。因此,我们探讨了客观测量的睡眠与体重指数(BMI)之间关联的方向性。
这项研究包含了来自普通人群的 1031 名参与者(女性占 52%,基线时年龄为 45-91 岁)。在为期六年的随访中,两次测量睡眠、BMI 和腰围(WC)。BMI 和 WC 在研究中心测量。腕戴活动记录仪估算总睡眠时间(TST,小时)、睡眠潜伏期(SOL,分钟)、睡眠效率(SE,%)和睡眠后清醒时间(WASO,分钟)。此外,还探讨了两个方向的横断面和纵向关联。
TST 减少一小时与 BMI 增加约 0.5kg/m2 呈横断面相关。纵向来看,TST 增加和 SE 升高与 BMI 降低相关(β=-0.75,95%CI:-1.08,-0.42;β=-0.04,95%CI:-0.08,-0.01)。相反,BMI 每增加 1kg/m2,前瞻性地与 TST 缩短 0.02 小时相关(95%CI:-0.03,-0.01),且这种关联随时间推移而更加明显。用 WC 进行的分析结果与 BMI 的结果一致。
这是第一项在中老年人群中探索客观测量睡眠与 BMI 之间关联的双向性的研究。较差的睡眠指标与随时间推移 BMI 升高和不稳定相关。相反,较高的 BMI 与睡眠时间减少相关。这证实了睡眠与身体大小之间的关系是双向的,并且通过多种途径,睡眠或 BMI 的变化都可能与健康的变化同时发生。