Abstract
Study Objectives: To assess the association between sleep duration in children and different markers of body fat by age and weight status. Design: Nation-wide health survey. Measurement of BMI and body fat percentage (KFA) calculated from weight, height, skin fold thickness, age, and sex. Sleep duration and potential confounding variables were assessed in a parent questionnaire. Setting: N/A Participants: 7767 German resident children from 3 to 10 years of age. Interventions: N/A Measurements and Results: Prolongation of sleep duration from the lowest to the highest percentile accounted for a similar mean decrease in BMI (-0.235, 95%-CI -0.321; -0.149) and KFA (-0.182, 95% CI -0.271; -0.092) z-scores. The given association is adjusted for confounding variables and did not show a systematic age dependency. The greatest effects of sleep duration were seen for the upper tails of the BMI and KFA distributions, which were about four as high as the lower tails. Conclusions: The association between sleep duration and weight status is of similar size through ages 3 to 10 years. The sleep-associated changes in BMI are likely to be a consequence of higher body fat and primarily affect children whose BMI or KFA is already elevated. These findings favor hormonal pathways nurturing adipose tissue playing a key role in the underlying physiological mechanisms.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bayer, O., Rosario, A. S., Wabitsch, M., & Von Kries, R. (2009). Sleep duration and obesity in children: Is the association dependent on age and choice of the outcome parameter? Sleep, 32(9), 1183–1189. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/32.9.1183
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.