Department of Epidemiology, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Nutr J. 2024 Oct 22;23(1):128. doi: 10.1186/s12937-024-01033-0.
Diet and sleep are both established risk factors for cardiometabolic diseases. Prior evidence suggests a potential link between these behaviors, though longitudinal evidence for how diet associates with sleep is scarce. This study aimed to determine the prospective association between diet quality in young adulthood and multiple sleep outcomes at midlife in the Bogalusa Heart Study (BHS).
This prospective study included 593 BHS subjects with dietary assessment at the 2001-2002 visit and sleep questionnaire responses from the 2013-2016 visit, after an average of 12.7 years (baseline mean age: 36 years, 36% male, 70%/30% White and Black persons). A culturally tailored, validated food frequency questionnaire assessed usual diet. Diet quality was measured with the Alternate Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) 2010, the Healthy Eating Index (HEI) 2015, and the alternate Mediterranean (aMed) dietary score. Robust Poisson regression with log-link function estimated risk ratios (RR) for insomnia symptoms, high sleep apnea score, and having a healthy sleep pattern by quintile and per standard deviation (SD) increase in dietary patterns. Models adjusted for potential confounders including multi-level socioeconomic factors, depression, and body mass index. Trends across quintiles and effect modification by sex, race, and education were tested.
Higher diet quality in young adulthood, measured by both AHEI and HEI, was associated with lower probability of having insomnia symptoms at midlife. In the adjusted model, each SD-increase in AHEI (7.8 points; 7% of score range) conferred 15% lower probability of insomnia symptoms at follow-up (RR [95% confidence interval CI]: 0.85 [0.77, 0.93]), those in Q5 of AHEI had 0.54 times the probability as those in Q1 (95% CI: 0.39, 0.75), and there was a significant trend across quintiles (trend p = 0.001). There were no significant associations between young adult diet quality and having a high sleep apnea risk or a healthy sleep pattern at follow-up.
A healthy diet was associated with a lower probability of future insomnia symptoms. If replicated, these findings could have implications for chronic disease prevention strategies incorporating the lifestyle behaviors of sleep and diet.
饮食和睡眠都是心血管代谢疾病的既定风险因素。先前的证据表明这些行为之间可能存在联系,但关于饮食与睡眠如何相关的纵向证据很少。本研究旨在确定博加拉卢萨心脏研究(BHS)中年轻人饮食质量与中年多种睡眠结果之间的前瞻性关联。
这项前瞻性研究包括 593 名 BHS 参与者,他们在 2001-2002 年就诊时接受了饮食评估,并在平均 12.7 年后(基线平均年龄:36 岁,36%为男性,70%/30%为白人和黑人)接受了 2013-2016 年的睡眠问卷答复。一种经过文化调整的、经过验证的食物频率问卷评估了常规饮食。通过替代健康饮食指数(AHEI)2010、健康饮食指数(HEI)2015 和替代地中海(aMed)饮食评分来衡量饮食质量。使用稳健泊松回归和对数链接函数估计了按五分位数和每个标准差(SD)增加的饮食模式与失眠症状、高睡眠呼吸暂停评分和健康睡眠模式的风险比(RR)。模型调整了潜在混杂因素,包括多层次的社会经济因素、抑郁和体重指数。测试了五分位数之间的趋势以及性别、种族和教育的效应修饰。
在调整后的模型中,AHEI 每增加一个 SD(7.8 分;评分范围的 7%),与中年时出现失眠症状的可能性降低 15%相关(RR [95%置信区间 CI]:0.85 [0.77, 0.93]),AHEI 五分位 Q5 的可能性是 Q1 的 0.54 倍(95% CI:0.39, 0.75),且五分位之间存在显著趋势(趋势 p=0.001)。年轻人饮食质量与中年时睡眠呼吸暂停风险高或睡眠健康模式之间没有显著关联。
健康的饮食与未来失眠症状的可能性降低有关。如果得到证实,这些发现可能对包含睡眠和饮食等生活方式行为的慢性病预防策略具有重要意义。