AI Article Synopsis

  • Insufficient sleep is linked to a higher risk of obesity in children, specifically influencing food choices more than activity levels, though the exact mechanisms are unclear.
  • The DREAM study aims to explore how mild sleep deprivation affects children's eating behaviors and activity levels by having 110 participants experience two weeks of altered sleep patterns (one week of later bedtimes and one week of earlier bedtimes) while monitoring their movements and eating habits.
  • The findings from this study could help clarify how reduced sleep contributes to weight gain in children, providing insights for health interventions and guidelines.

Article Abstract

Background: Although insufficient sleep has emerged as a strong, independent risk factor for obesity in children, the mechanisms by which insufficient sleep leads to weight gain are uncertain. Observational research suggests that being tired influences what children eat more than how active they are, but only experimental research can determine causality. Few experimental studies have been undertaken to determine how reductions in sleep duration might affect indices of energy balance in children including food choice, appetite regulation, and sedentary time. The primary aim of this study is to objectively determine whether mild sleep deprivation increases energy intake in the absence of hunger.

Methods: The Daily, Rest, Eating, and Activity Monitoring (DREAM) study is a randomized controlled trial investigating how mild sleep deprivation influences eating behaviour and activity patterns in children using a counterbalanced, cross-over design. One hundred and ten children aged 8-12 years, with normal reported sleep duration of 8-11 h per night will undergo 2 weeks of sleep manipulation; seven nights of sleep restriction by going to bed 1 hr later than usual, and seven nights of sleep extension going to bed 1 hr earlier than usual, separated by a washout week. During each experimental week, 24-h movement behaviours (sleep, physical activity, sedentary behaviour) will be measured via actigraphy; dietary intake and context of eating by multiple 24-h recalls and wearable camera images; and eating behaviours via objective and subjective methods. At the end of each experimental week a feeding experiment will determine energy intake from eating in the absence of hunger. Differences between sleep conditions will be determined to estimate the effects of reducing sleep duration by 1-2 h per night.

Discussion: Determining how insufficient sleep predisposes children to weight gain should provide much-needed information for improving interventions for the effective prevention of obesity, thereby decreasing long-term morbidity and healthcare burden.

Trial Registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12618001671257 . Registered 10 October 2018.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6805447PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7628-xDOI Listing

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