A recent study that will be presented at the SLEEP 2024 annual meeting discovered a connection between teen sedentary activity and carbohydrate consumption and circadian misalignment, which is very common in teenagers.
The findings indicate that eating more carbs was strongly correlated with a later sleep schedule and that this correlation was largely explained by erratic sleep schedules. Even after accounting for factors including demographics, sleep disorders, and inadequate sleep, a later sleep pattern was still linked to higher levels of sedentary behavior.
Delaying sleep schedules is normal during puberty and adolescence; however, some adolescents delay their sleep schedule to the extent that they become misaligned with the day-night cycle, their social schedules, and responsibilities. Our data supports that this lack of alignment may be associated with inadequate diet and physical activity, further contributing to the obesity epidemic and poor cardiometabolic health.” – Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, principal investigator, professor and clinical psychologist at Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pennsylvania
377 teenagers from the Penn State Child Cohort participated in the study; they underwent at least three nights of actigraphy at home and one night of polysomnography in the lab. Their sleep regularity and midpoint were calculated with the use of these tests. Actigraphy was also used to monitor physical activity, and a survey was used to gauge carbohydrate intake.
Sleep is vital to health, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, and healthy sleep necessitates sufficient length, high quality, proper scheduling and regularity, and the absence of sleep disorders or disruptions. Adolescents and young adults are more likely to have a delayed sleep schedule, which is defined by sleep timing that is later than typical or socially acceptable timing.
Fernandez-Mendoza pointed out that adolescents’ health depends on appropriate circadian alignment.
“Circadian misalignment of the sleep-wake cycle, and its associated variability in sleep duration, should be an integral part of interventions targeting poor dietary choices and sedentarism in youth,” Fernandez-Mendoza said.
The National Institutes of Health provided money for this study. The study abstract will be presented on Wednesday, June 5, at SLEEP 2024 in Houston. It was just published online in a supplement to the journal Sleep.
For more information: 0165 Association of Circadian Misalignment with Diet and Physical Activity in Adolescents, Sleep, https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsae067.0165
more recommended stories
-
Levothyroxine Linked to Bone Loss
Levothyroxine, the second most often prescribed.
-
Efficient AI-Driven Custom Protein Design Method
Protein design seeks to develop personalized.
-
Human Cell Atlas: Mapping Biology for Precision Medicine
In a recent perspective article published.
-
Preterm Birth Linked to Higher Mortality Risk
A new study from Wake Forest.
-
Heart Failure Risk Related to Obesity reduced by Tirzepatide
Tirzepatide, a weight-loss and diabetes medicine,.
-
Antibiotic Activity Altered by Nanoplastics
Antibiotic adsorption on micro- and nano-plastics.
-
Cocoa Flavonols: Combat Stress & Boost Vascular Health
Cocoa Flavonols on combatting Stress: Stress.
-
AI Predicts Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Prognosis
Researchers at Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet explored.
-
Music Therapy: A Breakthrough in Dementia Care?
‘Severe’ or ‘advanced’ dementia is a.
-
FasL Inhibitor Asunercept Speeds COVID-19 Recovery
A new clinical trial demonstrates that.
Leave a Comment