Hernandez Carson, Jensen Chad D, Duraccio Kara M
Department of Psychology, Brigham Young University, 288 TLRB, Provo, UT, United States.
Sleep Adv. 2025 Aug 5;6(3):zpaf050. doi: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpaf050. eCollection 2025.
This secondary data analysis study was designed to evaluate demographic and socioeconomic characteristics that may increase the magnitude of the impact of experimentally induced shortened sleep on suboptimal eating behaviors in adolescence.
Sixty-four adolescents completed a two-phase crossover study comparing five nights of restricted sleep to five nights of healthy sleep with adherence determined via accelerometry and with order randomized. Participants completed a 24-h dietary recall on the final day of each condition. We conducted repeated-measure -tests to examine the main effect of experimental condition on dietary outcomes and general linear models to test the moderating impact of sex, age, race, income, and weight class on these relationships.
There was no significant main effect of sleep condition on any dietary outcome. However, we found that males in the restricted sleep condition ate more added sugar, more carbohydrates, and fewer fruits than when in healthy sleep. Furthermore, younger adolescents consumed more carbohydrates, sugar, and added sugar when sleep restricted, compared to sleep extension. Lastly, adolescents from lower-income households consumed fewer vegetables when sleep restricted compared to when sleep was healthy, while-contrary to our hypothesis-participants from higher-income households consumed more vegetables in the restricted sleep condition relative to healthy sleep.
While no significant main effects of sleep duration on any dietary outcome were observed, this study provides preliminary evidence that restricted sleep can increase unhealthy eating habits, especially for males, younger adolescents, and adolescents from low-income households, informing obesity prevention and intervention efforts.
本二次数据分析研究旨在评估可能会加大实验性诱导的短睡眠对青少年不良饮食行为影响程度的人口统计学和社会经济特征。
64名青少年完成了一项两阶段交叉研究,该研究将五个晚上的限制睡眠与五个晚上的健康睡眠进行比较,通过加速度计确定依从性,且顺序随机。参与者在每种情况的最后一天完成了24小时饮食回顾。我们进行了重复测量检验以检查实验条件对饮食结果的主要影响,并使用一般线性模型来测试性别、年龄、种族、收入和体重类别对这些关系的调节作用。
睡眠条件对任何饮食结果均无显著的主要影响。然而,我们发现处于限制睡眠条件下的男性比处于健康睡眠状态时摄入了更多的添加糖、更多的碳水化合物,且摄入的水果更少。此外,与睡眠延长时相比,年龄较小的青少年在睡眠受限期间摄入了更多的碳水化合物、糖和添加糖。最后,与睡眠健康时相比,低收入家庭的青少年在睡眠受限时摄入的蔬菜更少,而与我们的假设相反,高收入家庭的参与者在限制睡眠条件下相对于健康睡眠时摄入了更多的蔬菜。
虽然未观察到睡眠时间对任何饮食结果有显著的主要影响,但本研究提供了初步证据,即限制睡眠会增加不健康的饮食习惯,尤其是对男性、年龄较小的青少年以及低收入家庭的青少年而言,这为肥胖预防和干预工作提供了参考。