Sleep and adiposity in preadolescent children: the importance of social jetlag
Sleep and adiposity in preadolescent children: the importance of social jetlag
BACKGROUND: While short and poor quality sleep have been associated with childhood obesity, no known studies have examined social jetlag. Social jetlag is the discrepancy between an individual's circadian clock and social rhythms, and is measured as the difference in hours between the midpoint of sleep during work/school days and on free (weekend) days. This study investigated the independent associations between sleep duration, sleep disturbances, and social jetlag with adiposity in children.
METHODS: A cross-sectional study, including 341 children (50% female) aged 8-10 years. Five dependent variables: body fat (%), fat mass (kg), fat mass index (FMI, kg/m2), waist to hip ratio, and body mass index (kg/m2). Three independent variables: average sleep duration, sleep disturbances, and social jetlag.
RESULTS: Following adjustment for confounders, sleep duration was not associated with any variable, and sleep disturbances were associated with FMI (β = 0.047, 95% CI: 0.002, 0.093 kg/m2), while social jetlag was associated with all five adiposity variables, including an absolute 3% greater body fat (β = 2.963, 95% CI: 0.40, 5.53%) per 1 hour of social jetlag.
CONCLUSIONS: Social jetlag may be an important and measurable public health target in children.
Adiposity/physiology, Body Composition, Body Mass Index, Child, Chronobiology Disorders/complications, Circadian Rhythm, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Jet Lag Syndrome, Male, New Zealand, Pediatric Obesity/etiology, Sex Factors, Sleep/physiology, Social Behavior, Time Factors, Waist-Hip Ratio
158-164
Stoner, Lee
fc664371-fcdc-412d-b2c2-1c1ce983b95e
Castro, Nicholas
dfd91206-043a-4856-a79f-328eaaeb765b
Signal, Leigh
c4a53daf-8aef-4d56-ab62-5e26ad2d33ef
Skidmore, Paula
d538e7da-b185-4c7f-9ef3-fa130293bb63
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Lark, Sally
4efafc16-2d48-4e22-8337-b6fb410f70a6
Williams, Michelle A
90364b54-80d0-4070-ace1-349149da998e
Muller, Diane
47419e0f-36ca-4329-950f-1e4f1b8c2f7a
Harrex, Harriet
e865b28b-1a8c-4b30-a901-e4edfde29edb
1 April 2018
Stoner, Lee
fc664371-fcdc-412d-b2c2-1c1ce983b95e
Castro, Nicholas
dfd91206-043a-4856-a79f-328eaaeb765b
Signal, Leigh
c4a53daf-8aef-4d56-ab62-5e26ad2d33ef
Skidmore, Paula
d538e7da-b185-4c7f-9ef3-fa130293bb63
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Lark, Sally
4efafc16-2d48-4e22-8337-b6fb410f70a6
Williams, Michelle A
90364b54-80d0-4070-ace1-349149da998e
Muller, Diane
47419e0f-36ca-4329-950f-1e4f1b8c2f7a
Harrex, Harriet
e865b28b-1a8c-4b30-a901-e4edfde29edb
Stoner, Lee, Castro, Nicholas, Signal, Leigh, Skidmore, Paula, Faulkner, James, Lark, Sally, Williams, Michelle A, Muller, Diane and Harrex, Harriet
(2018)
Sleep and adiposity in preadolescent children: the importance of social jetlag.
Childhood Obesity, 14 (3), .
(doi:10.1089/chi.2017.0272).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While short and poor quality sleep have been associated with childhood obesity, no known studies have examined social jetlag. Social jetlag is the discrepancy between an individual's circadian clock and social rhythms, and is measured as the difference in hours between the midpoint of sleep during work/school days and on free (weekend) days. This study investigated the independent associations between sleep duration, sleep disturbances, and social jetlag with adiposity in children.
METHODS: A cross-sectional study, including 341 children (50% female) aged 8-10 years. Five dependent variables: body fat (%), fat mass (kg), fat mass index (FMI, kg/m2), waist to hip ratio, and body mass index (kg/m2). Three independent variables: average sleep duration, sleep disturbances, and social jetlag.
RESULTS: Following adjustment for confounders, sleep duration was not associated with any variable, and sleep disturbances were associated with FMI (β = 0.047, 95% CI: 0.002, 0.093 kg/m2), while social jetlag was associated with all five adiposity variables, including an absolute 3% greater body fat (β = 2.963, 95% CI: 0.40, 5.53%) per 1 hour of social jetlag.
CONCLUSIONS: Social jetlag may be an important and measurable public health target in children.
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Published date: 1 April 2018
Keywords:
Adiposity/physiology, Body Composition, Body Mass Index, Child, Chronobiology Disorders/complications, Circadian Rhythm, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Jet Lag Syndrome, Male, New Zealand, Pediatric Obesity/etiology, Sex Factors, Sleep/physiology, Social Behavior, Time Factors, Waist-Hip Ratio
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 497898
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497898
ISSN: 2153-2168
PURE UUID: d500e4a0-4937-4892-a3a5-c32bbb029566
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Date deposited: 04 Feb 2025 17:41
Last modified: 08 Feb 2025 03:21
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Contributors
Author:
Lee Stoner
Author:
Nicholas Castro
Author:
Leigh Signal
Author:
Paula Skidmore
Author:
James Faulkner
Author:
Sally Lark
Author:
Michelle A Williams
Author:
Diane Muller
Author:
Harriet Harrex
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