Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas.
Military Nutrition Division, US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, Massachusetts.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2024 Aug;124(8):1051-1057. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2024.04.016. Epub 2024 Apr 30.
Limited data exist examining whether timing and/or duration of eating behaviors throughout the day affect sleep health.
The aim of this study was to identify the relationship between eating behaviors and sleep in young adults without chronic diseases or conditions.
This was a cross-sectional study using 7 days of baseline data from a randomized crossover trial.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: Participants included 52 young adults. The study took place in West Lafayette, Indiana, between April 2017 and May 2018.
Timing and duration of eating were assessed via 3 nonconsecutive, 24-hour dietary recalls. Bedtime, wake time, total sleep time, sleep latency, sleep efficiency, and wake after sleep onset were measured over 7 days via wrist actigraphy and sleep diaries.
Two-way analyses of variance were applied to assess group differences based on timing of consumption (early vs late eating) and duration of eating (long: >13 hours, short: <11 hours, or standard: 11-13 hours) with post-hoc pairwise comparisons.
Main effects of timing of consumption, but not duration of eating, were detected for wake time, bedtime, and sleep efficiency (all, P < .05). Specifically, participants with later eating patterns that included breakfast skipping had later wake times and later bedtimes than those with earlier eating patterns. In addition, those who had later eating patterns that included breakfast skipping and nighttime eating experienced lower sleep efficiency (mean [SE], 77.0% [2.3%]) vs those who consumed breakfast and no nighttime eating (mean [SE], 84.6% [1.4%]; P < .001) and those who skipped breakfast but had no nighttime eating (mean [SE], 84.2% [2.5]; P < .05). Those who consumed breakfast but also had nighttime eating had a mean (SE) sleep efficiency of 82.4% (1.4%) (P = .09).
The timing of eating was associated with sleep-wake onset and sleep efficiency. This study provides the preliminary characterization of eating behaviors relative to sleep-wake cycles and highlights the need for experimental studies to understand whether manipulating the timing of eating occasions to better align with sleep-wake cycles could improve sleep health.
目前关于一天中进食时间和/或时长是否会影响睡眠健康的相关数据十分有限。
本研究旨在探究在无慢性疾病或病症的年轻人群中,进食行为与睡眠之间的关系。
这是一项横断面研究,研究数据来源于一项随机交叉试验的 7 天基线数据。
参与者/设置:共纳入 52 名年轻成年人。研究于 2017 年 4 月至 2018 年 5 月在印第安纳州西拉斐特进行。
通过 3 次非连续的 24 小时膳食回顾评估进食时间和时长。通过腕部动作记录仪和睡眠日记连续 7 天记录就寝时间、醒来时间、总睡眠时间、入睡潜伏期、睡眠效率和睡眠后醒来次数。
采用双向方差分析评估基于消费时间(早进食与晚进食)和进食时长(长:>13 小时,短:<11 小时,或标准:11-13 小时)的组间差异,并进行事后两两比较。
仅消费时间,而非进食时长,对醒来时间、就寝时间和睡眠效率具有主要影响(均 P <.05)。具体而言,与早进食模式相比,那些存在早餐禁食且进食时间较晚的参与者,其醒来时间和就寝时间均较晚。此外,与不吃早餐且无夜间进食的人群(睡眠效率为 77.0% [2.3%])相比,那些早餐和夜间均进食的人群(睡眠效率为 84.6% [1.4%];P <.001)和早餐禁食但无夜间进食的人群(睡眠效率为 84.2% [2.5%];P <.05),早餐禁食且夜间进食的人群睡眠效率较低。那些早餐进食且夜间也进食的人群,其睡眠效率为 82.4%(1.4%)(P =.09)。
进食时间与睡眠-觉醒周期有关。本研究初步描述了进食行为与睡眠-觉醒周期的关系,强调需要开展实验研究,以明确调整进食时间,使其与睡眠-觉醒周期更好地匹配是否能改善睡眠健康。