Medical Chronobiology Program, Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Departments of Medicine and Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Division of Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Sleep. 2021 May 14;44(5). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsaa256.
Disturbances of rest-activity rhythms are associated with higher body mass index (BMI) in adults. Whether such relationship exists in children is unclear. We aimed to examine cross-sectional associations of rest-activity rhythm characteristics with BMI z-score and obesity-related inflammatory markers in school-age children.
Participants included 411 healthy children (mean ± SD age 10.1 ± 1.3 years, 50.8% girls) from a Mediterranean area of Spain who wore wrist accelerometers for 7 consecutive days. Metrics of rest-activity rhythm were derived using both parametric and nonparametric approaches. Obesity-related inflammatory markers were measured in saliva (n = 121).
In a multivariable-adjusted model, higher BMI z-score is associated with less robust 24-h rest-activity rhythms as represented by lower relative amplitude (-0.16 [95% CI -0.29, -0.02] per SD, p = 0.02). The association between BMI z-score and relative amplitude persisted with additional adjustment for sleep duration, and attenuated after adjustment for daytime activity level. Less robust rest-activity rhythms were related to increased levels of several salivary pro-inflammatory markers, including C-reactive protein, which is inversely associated with relative amplitude (-32.6% [-47.8%, -12.9%] per SD), independently of BMI z-score, sleep duration, and daytime activity level.
Blunted rest-activity rhythms are associated with higher BMI z-score and salivary pro-inflammatory markers already at an early age. The association with BMI z-score seem to be independent of sleep duration, and those with pro-inflammatory markers further independent of BMI z-score and daytime activity. Novel intervention targets at an early age based on improving the strength of rest-activity rhythms may help to prevent childhood obesity and related inflammation.
NCT02895282.
在成年人中,休息-活动节律紊乱与较高的体重指数(BMI)相关。这种关系在儿童中是否存在尚不清楚。我们旨在研究学龄儿童休息-活动节律特征与 BMI z 评分和肥胖相关炎症标志物的横断面关联。
参与者包括来自西班牙地中海地区的 411 名健康儿童(平均年龄±标准差为 10.1±1.3 岁,50.8%为女孩),他们连续 7 天佩戴腕部加速度计。使用参数和非参数方法得出休息-活动节律的度量。在唾液中测量与肥胖相关的炎症标志物(n=121)。
在多变量调整模型中,较高的 BMI z 评分与 24 小时休息-活动节律较弱相关,表现为相对幅度较低(每标准差减少 0.16[-0.29,-0.02],p=0.02)。在调整睡眠时间后,BMI z 评分与相对幅度之间的关联仍然存在,在调整日间活动水平后,这种关联减弱。较弱的休息-活动节律与几种唾液促炎标志物水平升高有关,包括 C 反应蛋白,其与相对幅度呈负相关(每标准差减少 32.6%[-47.8%,-12.9%]),独立于 BMI z 评分、睡眠时间和日间活动水平。
休息-活动节律减弱与较高的 BMI z 评分和唾液促炎标志物相关,即使在早期也如此。与 BMI z 评分的关联似乎独立于睡眠时间,与促炎标志物的关联进一步独立于 BMI z 评分和日间活动水平。基于改善休息-活动节律强度的早期新型干预目标可能有助于预防儿童肥胖和相关炎症。
NCT02895282。