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Sleep symptoms associated with intake of specific dietary nutrients.

Authors :
Grandner, Michael A.
Jackson, Nicholas
Gerstner, Jason R.
Knutson, Kristen L.
Source :
Journal of Sleep Research; Feb2014, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p22-34, 13p
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Sleep symptoms are associated with weight gain and cardiometabolic disease. The potential role of diet has been largely unexplored. Data from the 2007-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ( NHANES) were used ( n = 4552) to determine which nutrients were associated with sleep symptoms in a nationally representative sample. Survey items assessed difficulty falling asleep, sleep maintenance difficulties, non-restorative sleep and daytime sleepiness. Analyses were adjusted for energy intake, other dietary factors, exercise, body mass index ( BMI) and sociodemographics. Population-weighted, logistic regression, with backwards-stepwise selection, examined which nutrients were associated with sleep symptoms. Odds ratios ( ORs) reflect the difference in odds of sleep symptoms associated with a doubling in nutrient. Nutrients that were associated independently with difficulty falling asleep included (in order): alpha-carotene ( OR = 0.96), selenium ( OR = 0.80), dodecanoic acid ( OR = 0.91), calcium ( OR = 0.83) and hexadecanoic acid ( OR = 1.10). Nutrients that were associated independently with sleep maintenance difficulties included: salt ( OR = 1.19), butanoic acid (0.81), carbohydrate ( OR = 0.71), dodecanoic acid ( OR = 0.90), vitamin D ( OR = 0.84), lycopene ( OR = 0.98), hexanoic acid ( OR = 1.25) and moisture ( OR = 1.27). Nutrients that were associated independently with non-restorative sleep included butanoic acid ( OR = 1.09), calcium ( OR = 0.81), vitamin C ( OR = 0.92), water ( OR = 0.98), moisture ( OR = 1.41) and cholesterol ( OR = 1.10). Nutrients that were associated independently with sleepiness included: moisture ( OR = 1.20), theobromine ( OR = 1.04), potassium ( OR = 0.70) and water ( OR = 0.97). These results suggest novel associations between sleep symptoms and diet/metabolism, potentially explaining associations between sleep and cardiometabolic diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09621105
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Sleep Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
93662580
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jsr.12084