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      Short Sleep Duration and Dietary Intake: Epidemiologic Evidence, Mechanisms, and Health Implications 1 2

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          Abstract

          Links between short sleep duration and obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease may be mediated through changes in dietary intake. This review provides an overview of recent epidemiologic studies on the relations between habitual short sleep duration and dietary intake in adults from 16 cross-sectional studies. The studies have observed consistent associations between short sleep duration and higher total energy intake and higher total fat intake, and limited evidence for lower fruit intake, and lower quality diets. Evidence also suggests that short sleepers may have irregular eating behavior deviating from the traditional 3 meals/d to fewer main meals and more frequent, smaller, energy-dense, and highly palatable snacks at night. Although the impact of short sleep duration on dietary intake tends to be small, if chronic, it may contribute to an increased risk of obesity and related chronic disease. Mechanisms mediating the associations between sleep duration and dietary intake are likely to be multifactorial and include differences in the appetite-related hormones leptin and ghrelin, hedonic pathways, extended hours for intake, and altered time of intake. Taking into account these epidemiologic relations and the evidence for causal relations between sleep loss and metabolism and cardiovascular function, health promotion strategies should emphasize improved sleep as an additional factor in health and weight management. Moreover, future sleep interventions in controlled studies and sleep extension trials in chronic short sleepers are imperative for establishing whether there is a causal relation between short sleep duration and changes in dietary intake.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Adv Nutr
          Adv Nutr
          advances in nutrition
          advannut
          Advances in Nutrition
          American Society for Nutrition
          2161-8313
          2156-5376
          November 2015
          10 November 2015
          1 November 2016
          : 6
          : 6
          : 648-659
          Affiliations
          [3 ]Nutrition and Genomics Laboratory,
          [4 ]Nutritional Epidemiology Laboratory, and
          [5 ]Cardiovascular Nutrition Laboratory, Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, Tufts University, Boston, MA;
          [6 ]Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA;
          [7 ]Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA;
          [8 ]Department of Epidemiology, National Center for Cardiovascular Research, Madrid, Spain;
          [9 ]Madrid Institutes of Advanced Research, Madrid, Spain
          Author notes
          [* ]To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: hassan.dashti@ 123456tufts.edu .
          [1]

          Supported by the USDA under agreement no. 58-1950-0-014. Supported in part by NIH grants R21 DK089378 and R01 HL094806 (FAJLS).

          [2]

          Author disclosures: HS Dashti, FAJL Scheer, PF Jacques, S Lamon-Fava, and JM Ordovás, no conflicts of interest.

          Article
          PMC4642416 PMC4642416 4642416 008623
          10.3945/an.115.008623
          4642416
          26567190
          3bf41f05-7b74-43ec-b01b-424aa4fb8824
          © 2015 American Society for Nutrition
          History
          Page count
          Pages: 12
          Categories
          Reviews

          obesity,sleep,BMI,CLOCK,time,short sleep duration,dietary intake
          obesity, sleep, BMI, CLOCK, time, short sleep duration, dietary intake

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