SleepCited

Sleep symptoms associated with intake of specific dietary nutrients.

Michael A Grandner, Nicholas Jackson, Jason R Gerstner, Kristen L Knutson
Other Journal of sleep research 2014 236 atıf

Çalışma Tasarımı

Çalışma Türü
Observational Study
Örneklem Büyüklüğü
4552
Popülasyon
Nationally representative US adult sample from NHANES 2007-2008
Müdahale
Sleep symptoms associated with intake of specific dietary nutrients.
Karşılaştırıcı
Reference nutrient levels (logistic regression with backwards stepwise selection)
Birincil Sonuç
Association between dietary nutrients and sleep symptoms (difficulty falling asleep, sleep maintenance, non-restorative sleep, daytime sleepiness)
Etki Yönü
Mixed
Yanlılık Riski
Moderate

Özet

Sleep symptoms are associated with weight gain and cardiometabolic disease. The potential role of diet has been largely unexplored. Data from the 2007-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) were used (n = 4552) to determine which nutrients were associated with sleep symptoms in a nationally representative sample. Survey items assessed difficulty falling asleep, sleep maintenance difficulties, non-restorative sleep and daytime sleepiness. Analyses were adjusted for energy intake, other dietary factors, exercise, body mass index (BMI) and sociodemographics. Population-weighted, logistic regression, with backwards-stepwise selection, examined which nutrients were associated with sleep symptoms. Odds ratios (ORs) reflect the difference in odds of sleep symptoms associated with a doubling in nutrient. Nutrients that were associated independently with difficulty falling asleep included (in order): alpha-carotene (OR = 0.96), selenium (OR = 0.80), dodecanoic acid (OR = 0.91), calcium (OR = 0.83) and hexadecanoic acid (OR = 1.10). Nutrients that were associated independently with sleep maintenance difficulties included: salt (OR = 1.19), butanoic acid (0.81), carbohydrate (OR = 0.71), dodecanoic acid (OR = 0.90), vitamin D (OR = 0.84), lycopene (OR = 0.98), hexanoic acid (OR = 1.25) and moisture (OR = 1.27). Nutrients that were associated independently with non-restorative sleep included butanoic acid (OR = 1.09), calcium (OR = 0.81), vitamin C (OR = 0.92), water (OR = 0.98), moisture (OR = 1.41) and cholesterol (OR = 1.10). Nutrients that were associated independently with sleepiness included: moisture (OR = 1.20), theobromine (OR = 1.04), potassium (OR = 0.70) and water (OR = 0.97). These results suggest novel associations between sleep symptoms and diet/metabolism, potentially explaining associations between sleep and cardiometabolic diseases.

Kısaca

Novel associations are suggested between sleep symptoms and diet/metabolism, potentially explaining associations between sleep and cardiometabolic diseases.

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