Alfikany Mira, Sakhr Khaula, Kremers Stef, El Khatib Sami, Adam Tanja, Meertens Ree
Department of Health Promotion, NUTRIM Institute of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University Medical Center+, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences, School of Arts and Sciences, Lebanese International University, Bekaa, Beirut P.O. Box 146404, Lebanon.
Clocks Sleep. 2025 Jul 29;7(3):39. doi: 10.3390/clockssleep7030039.
Short sleep has been linked to overweight, possibly via alterations in appetite-regulating hormones, but findings are inconsistent. Sex differences may contribute to this variability. This systematic review examines whether sex modifies the hormonal response to sleep curtailment. PubMed, Embase, Cochrane, CINAHL, and PsycINFO were searched for English-language experimental studies published before December 2024. Included studies assessed at least one appetite-regulating hormone and presented sex-specific analyses. Studies involving health conditions affecting sleep, circadian misalignment, or additional interventions were excluded. Risk of bias was assessed using the Revised Cochrane Risk-of-Bias tool (RoB 2). Eight studies ( = 302 participants) met inclusion criteria. A narrative synthesis of the findings was conducted for each hormone separately to explore potential differences in their response to sleep restriction. Some sex-related variations in hormonal response to sleep restriction have been observed for leptin (four studies, = 232), insulin (three studies, = 56), glucagon-like peptide-1 (one study, = 27), ghrelin (three studies, = 87), adiponectin (two studies, = 71) and thyroxine (two studies, = 41). However, findings were inconsistent with no clear patterns. No sex-related differences were found for glucagon or PYY, though data were limited. Findings suggest sex may influence hormonal responses to sleep restriction, but inconsistencies highlight the need to consider factors such as BMI and energy balance. Well-controlled, adequately powered studies are needed to clarify these effects.
短睡眠与超重有关,可能是通过食欲调节激素的变化,但研究结果并不一致。性别差异可能导致了这种变异性。本系统评价旨在研究性别是否会改变对睡眠减少的激素反应。在PubMed、Embase、Cochrane、CINAHL和PsycINFO中检索了2024年12月之前发表的英文实验研究。纳入的研究评估了至少一种食欲调节激素,并进行了性别特异性分析。排除了涉及影响睡眠的健康状况、昼夜节律失调或额外干预的研究。使用修订后的Cochrane偏倚风险工具(RoB 2)评估偏倚风险。八项研究(n = 302名参与者)符合纳入标准。分别对每种激素的研究结果进行叙述性综合分析,以探讨它们对睡眠限制反应的潜在差异。在瘦素(四项研究,n = 232)、胰岛素(三项研究,n = 56)、胰高血糖素样肽-1(一项研究,n = 27)、胃饥饿素(三项研究,n = 87)、脂联素(两项研究,n = 71)和甲状腺素(两项研究,n = 41)方面,观察到了一些与性别相关的激素对睡眠限制反应的差异。然而,研究结果并不一致,没有明确的模式。尽管数据有限,但未发现胰高血糖素或PYY存在与性别相关的差异。研究结果表明,性别可能会影响对睡眠限制的激素反应,但不一致性突出了需要考虑体重指数和能量平衡等因素。需要进行严格控制、有足够样本量的研究来阐明这些影响。