Culver Meral N, Linder Braxton A, Lyons Delaney E, Hutchison Zach J, Garrett Catherine L, McNeil Jessica N, Robinson Austin T
Neurovascular Physiology Laboratory, School of Kinesiology, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, United States.
Department of Kinesiology, School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, United States.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2025 Mar 1;328(3):R262-R273. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00168.2024. Epub 2025 Jan 28.
Vitamin D is associated with sleep quality and duration, but it is unclear whether vitamin D status influences sleep variability. Therefore, we sought to determine whether vitamin D status was associated with sleep variability in healthy adults. We assessed objective sleep, including timing and duration standard deviation (SD) using the Philips Actiwatch Spectrum and subjective sleep quality using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) in 130 adults. We measured plasma 25(OH)D concentration to assess vitamin D. We used one-way ANOVAs and Kruskal-Wallis tests to compare sleep in participants characterized as vitamin D deficient (<20 ng/mL), insufficient (21-29 ng/mL), and sufficient (>30ng/mL). We used covariate-adjusted linear regression to assess associations between vitamin D status and sleep metrics. We compared differences in "low" and "high" sleep variability based on vitamin D status using the Chi-squared test. There was an effect of vitamin D status on sleep timing SD (Kruskal-Wallis, = 0.021) and sleep duration SD (Kruskal-Wallis, < 0.001). There was an inverse association between vitamin D status with sleep duration SD (after covariate adjustment = 0.267, < 0.001, deficient vs. sufficient = 0.050, insufficient vs. sufficient = 0.022). There was no effect of vitamin D status on objective sleep duration, efficiency, or PSQI scores ( > 0.05). We did not observe differences in "low" and "high" sleep timing SD based on vitamin D status (χ = 5.43, = 0.066), but we did for sleep duration SD (χ = 22.4, < 0.001). Our data indicate that individuals with poor vitamin D status exhibit greater objective sleep variability. Clinical Trial Registry: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/; Unique identifiers NCT04334135, NCT04244604, and NCT04576338. Our findings reveal that individuals with lower circulating vitamin D concentrations experience greater sleep variability compared with those with higher circulating concentrations. This supports the growing body of evidence suggesting an important link between vitamin D status and sleep health.
维生素D与睡眠质量和时长相关,但维生素D状态是否会影响睡眠变异性尚不清楚。因此,我们试图确定维生素D状态是否与健康成年人的睡眠变异性有关。我们使用飞利浦Actiwatch Spectrum评估了130名成年人的客观睡眠情况,包括入睡时间和睡眠时间标准差(SD),并使用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)评估主观睡眠质量。我们测量了血浆25(OH)D浓度以评估维生素D状态。我们使用单因素方差分析和Kruskal-Wallis检验来比较维生素D缺乏(<20 ng/mL)、不足(21 - 29 ng/mL)和充足(>30 ng/mL)的参与者的睡眠情况。我们使用协变量调整线性回归来评估维生素D状态与睡眠指标之间的关联。我们使用卡方检验比较基于维生素D状态的“低”和“高”睡眠变异性的差异。维生素D状态对入睡时间标准差有影响(Kruskal-Wallis检验,P = 0.021),对睡眠时间标准差也有影响(Kruskal-Wallis检验,P < 0.001)。维生素D状态与睡眠时间标准差呈负相关(协变量调整后β = −0.267,P < 0.001,缺乏组与充足组相比P = 0.050,不足组与充足组相比P = 0.022)。维生素D状态对客观睡眠时间、睡眠效率或PSQI评分没有影响(P > 0.05)。基于维生素D状态,我们未观察到“低”和“高”入睡时间标准差的差异(χ² = 5.43,P = 0.066),但在睡眠时间标准差方面观察到了差异(χ² = 22.4,P < 0.001)。我们的数据表明,维生素D状态不佳的个体表现出更大的客观睡眠变异性。临床试验注册:https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/;唯一标识符为NCT04334135、NCT04244604和NCT04576338。我们的研究结果表明,与循环维生素D浓度较高的个体相比,循环维生素D浓度较低的个体睡眠变异性更大。这支持了越来越多的证据表明维生素D状态与睡眠健康之间存在重要联系。