Article

Associations of sleep duration with obesity and serum lipid profile in children and adolescents.

Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.
Sleep Medicine (impact factor: 3.4). 06/2011; 12(7):659-65. DOI:10.1016/j.sleep.2010.12.015 pp.659-65
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT The association between sleep duration, obesity, and serum lipid profile in the youth population is under-explored.
To evaluate the association between sleep duration, obesity and serum lipid profile in the youth population.
We conducted a cross-sectional population-based study with students recruited from primary and secondary schools in Hong Kong. Anthropometric measurements, fasting lipid profiles and validated questionnaires on sleep duration were performed. A subgroup (n=138) was randomly selected for both questionnaires and actigraphy to assess the agreement between subjective and objective measurements of sleep duration.
We studied 2053 healthy children and adolescents aged 6-20 years. Their mean ages were 13.0±3.3 (boys) and 13.6±3.3 (girls) years. The average sleep duration during schooldays, weekends, and long holidays was 8.0±1.1, 9.6±1.2, and 9.8±1.2h in boys and 7.7±1.1, 9.9±1.2, and 10.1±1.2h in girls, respectively. Using logistic regression, age, and pubertal stage were associated with obesity in secondary school students, whereas male gender and short sleep duration were associated with obesity in primary school children. In secondary school children, those with long sleep duration, as compared to those with short sleep duration, were significantly associated with reduced risk to have high TC and LDL-C levels after adjustment for age, gender, BMI, and pubertal stage. There was no significant association between sleep duration and lipid levels in primary school children.
Reduced sleep duration was associated with obesity and atherogenic dyslipidemia in young school children in Hong Kong.

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Keywords

2053 healthy children
 
Anthropometric measurements
 
atherogenic dyslipidemia
 
cross-sectional population-based study
 
fasting lipid profiles
 
Hong Kong
 
logistic regression
 
male gender
 
mean ages
 
obesity
 
primary school children
 
pubertal stage
 
secondary school children
 
secondary school students
 
secondary schools
 
serum lipid profile
 
significant association
 
students recruited
 
young school children
 
youth population