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Sex differences in the association between sleep and body mass index in adolescents

Page history last edited by Dolores Skowronek 7 years, 1 month ago

Knutson, K. L. (2005). Sex differences in the association between sleep and body mass index in adolescents. The Journal of Pediatrics, 147(6), 830-4.

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Abstract

Objective

To determine whether an association between short sleep duration and increased body mass index (BMI) exists in a sample of U.S. adolescents.

 

Study Design

Public-use dataset of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Final sample included 4486 adolescents (51% female). Main outcome was BMI transformed into z-scores for age and sex using reference values from the Centers for Disease Control/National Center for Health Statistics. Overweight was defined as > or =95th percentile. Linear and logistic regression models were calculated. Sleep duration was self-reported in hours. A quadratic term for sleep was added to test curvilinear association. Covariates included age, race, parental education, activity and inactivity scores.

 

Results

Among males, linear regression indicated that sleep duration significantly predicted BMI z-score (Beta = -0.08, 95% CI: -0.12, -0.03). Logistic regression indicated that sleep duration predicted risk of overweight among males (OR = 0.90, 95% CI: 0.82, 1.00). Sleep duration was not a significant predictor among females in either regression model. Quadratic term for sleep was not significant for either sex.

 

Conclusions

Longer sleep duration was weakly associated with lower BMI and risk of overweight among male adolescents only. This sex-related difference may be due to differences in the physiology of puberty or in sleep characteristics.

 

MeSH Terms
    Adolescent
    Body Mass Index*
    Female
    Humans
    Linear Models
    Logistic Models
    Longitudinal Studies
    Male
    Obesity/epidemiology
    Overweight*
    Risk Factors
    Sex Factors
    Sleep*
    Sleep Deprivation/epidemiology
    United States/epidemiology

 

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