AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how sleep duration during the week and social jetlag (the difference in sleep between weekdays and weekends) relates to dietary patterns in UK adults aged 19-64.
  • Survey participants kept dietary records for several days, and their sleep duration was categorized as short, normal, or long.
  • Results indicated that longer sleep during weekdays and higher social jetlag were connected to lower scores on the healthy dietary pattern scale, suggesting that excessive sleep may negatively impact dietary choices.

Article Abstract

Limited observational studies have described the relationship between sleep duration and overall diet. The present study investigated the association between sleep duration on weekdays or social jetlag and empirically derived dietary patterns in a nationally representative sample of UK adults, aged 19⁻64 years old, participating in the 2008⁻2012 UK National Diet and Nutrition Survey Rolling Programme. Survey members completed between three to four days of dietary records. Sleep duration on weekdays was categorized into tertiles to reflect short, normal, and long sleep duration. Social jetlag was calculated as the difference between sleep duration on weekends and weekdays. The association between sleep duration/social jetlag and dietary patterns, derived by principal components analysis, was assessed by regressing diet on sleep, whilst accounting for the complex survey design and adjusting for relevant confounders. Survey members in the highest tertile of sleep duration had on average a 0.45 (95% Confidence Interval (CI) -0.78, -0.12) lower healthy dietary pattern score, compared to middle tertile ( = 0.007). There was an inverted u-shaped association between social jetlag and the healthy dietary pattern, such that when sleep on weekends exceeded weekday sleep by 1 h 45 min, scores for indicating a healthy dietary pattern declined ( = 0.005). In conclusion, long sleep duration on weekdays and an increased social jetlag are associated with a lower healthy dietary pattern score. Further research is required to address factors influencing dietary patterns in long sleepers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6163907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu10091131DOI Listing

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