Chapman Tiffany M, McAlister Kelsey L, Moore Kristen N, Wang Wei-Lin, Belcher Britni R
Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90032, United States.
Ann Behav Med. 2025 Jan 4;59(1). doi: 10.1093/abm/kaaf031.
More screen time (ST) is associated with dysregulation of the individual biological systems (cardiovascular, immune, metabolic, and neuroendocrine) involved in the stress response in youth. However, its relationship with allostatic load (AL), a measure of the cumulative physiological stress response, is unclear in youth.
To investigate the associations between ST types and AL outcomes in youth and to explore sociodemographic and behavioral moderators of these relationships.
Cross-sectional data were from 1053 US youth aged 12-17 years (Mage = 14.20; 54% male; 21% Hispanic) in the 2015-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). ST was assessed as watching TV/videos and computer use/playing computer games. AL was measured using 7 biomarkers across 3 systems: cardiovascular (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate), immune (C-reactive protein), and metabolic (body mass index, glycohemoglobin, and high-density lipoprotein). Weighted multivariable regression models assessed whether ST predicted AL composite and subsystem (cardiovascular, immune, and metabolic) scores. Moderation by age, sex, income, race/ethnicity, and physical activity was explored.
A 1-hour/day increase in watching TV/videos was associated with a 4% increase in mean AL composite score (incident rate ratio = 1.040; 95% CI = 1.008, 1.073; P = .015), while computer use/gaming showed no significant associations (P's > .05). Age moderated the TV/videos-AL cardiovascular association (P = .009), with older youth having higher AL cardiovascular scores.
More time spent watching TV/videos was associated with higher cumulative physiological stress in youth. Prospective studies are needed to determine causal pathways and potential intervention targets in youth.
更多的屏幕时间(ST)与青少年应激反应中涉及的个体生物系统(心血管、免疫、代谢和神经内分泌)的失调有关。然而,在青少年中,其与衡量累积生理应激反应的应激负荷(AL)之间的关系尚不清楚。
研究青少年中ST类型与AL结果之间的关联,并探讨这些关系的社会人口统计学和行为调节因素。
横断面数据来自2015 - 2018年美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)中的1053名12 - 17岁的美国青少年(平均年龄 = 14.20岁;54%为男性;21%为西班牙裔)。ST被评估为看电视/视频以及使用电脑/玩电脑游戏。AL通过跨3个系统的7种生物标志物进行测量:心血管系统(收缩压和舒张压、心率)、免疫系统(C反应蛋白)和代谢系统(体重指数、糖化血红蛋白和高密度脂蛋白)。加权多变量回归模型评估ST是否能预测AL综合评分和子系统(心血管、免疫和代谢)评分。探讨了年龄、性别、收入、种族/民族和体育活动的调节作用。
每天看电视/视频时间增加1小时与平均AL综合评分增加4%相关(发病率比 = 1.040;95%置信区间 = 1.008, 1.073;P = 0.015),而使用电脑/玩游戏则无显著关联(P > 0.05)。年龄调节了看电视/视频与AL心血管系统的关联(P = 0.009),年龄较大的青少年AL心血管评分更高。
青少年花更多时间看电视/视频与更高的累积生理应激相关。需要进行前瞻性研究以确定青少年中的因果途径和潜在干预靶点。