The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity: A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity : A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study. / Andersen, Mie M.; Laurberg, Tinne; Bjerregaard, Anne Louise; Sandbæk, Annelli; Brage, Søren; Vistisen, Dorte; Quist, Jonas S.; Bruun, Jens M.; Witte, Daniel R.

In: Obesity Science and Practice, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2023, p. 226-234.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Andersen, MM, Laurberg, T, Bjerregaard, AL, Sandbæk, A, Brage, S, Vistisen, D, Quist, JS, Bruun, JM & Witte, DR 2023, 'The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity: A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study', Obesity Science and Practice, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 226-234. https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.640

APA

Andersen, M. M., Laurberg, T., Bjerregaard, A. L., Sandbæk, A., Brage, S., Vistisen, D., Quist, J. S., Bruun, J. M., & Witte, D. R. (2023). The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity: A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study. Obesity Science and Practice, 9(3), 226-234. https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.640

Vancouver

Andersen MM, Laurberg T, Bjerregaard AL, Sandbæk A, Brage S, Vistisen D et al. The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity: A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study. Obesity Science and Practice. 2023;9(3): 226-234. https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.640

Author

Andersen, Mie M. ; Laurberg, Tinne ; Bjerregaard, Anne Louise ; Sandbæk, Annelli ; Brage, Søren ; Vistisen, Dorte ; Quist, Jonas S. ; Bruun, Jens M. ; Witte, Daniel R. / The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity : A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study. In: Obesity Science and Practice. 2023 ; Vol. 9, No. 3. pp. 226-234.

Bibtex

@article{a387d5d2f0bf4a289b3b1f46f983ea96,
title = "The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity: A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study",
abstract = "Background: Sleep duration is associated with BMI and waist circumference. However, less is known about whether sleep duration affects different measurements of obesity differently. Objective: To investigate the association between sleep duration and different measures of obesity. Methods: In this cross-sectional analysis 1309, Danish, older adults (55% men) completed at least 3 days of wearing a combined accelerometer and heart rate-monitor for assessing sleep duration (hours/night) within self-reported usual bedtime. Participants underwent anthropometry and ultrasonography to assess BMI, waist circumference, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, and fat percentage. Linear regression analyses examined the associations between sleep duration and obesity-related outcomes. Results: Sleep duration was inversely associated with all obesity-related outcomes, except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio. After multivariate adjustment the magnitude of associations became stronger and statistically significant for all outcomes except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio, and subcutaneous fat in women. The associations with BMI and waist circumference demonstrated the strongest associations, when comparing standardized regression coefficients. Conclusions: Shorter sleep duration were associated with higher obesity across all outcomes except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio. No specifically salient associations with local or central obesity were observed. Results suggest that poor sleep duration and obesity correlate, however, further research is needed to conclude on beneficial effects of sleep duration regarding health and weight loss.",
keywords = "obesity, sleep duration, subcutaneous fat, visceral fat",
author = "Andersen, {Mie M.} and Tinne Laurberg and Bjerregaard, {Anne Louise} and Annelli Sandb{\ae}k and S{\o}ren Brage and Dorte Vistisen and Quist, {Jonas S.} and Bruun, {Jens M.} and Witte, {Daniel R.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Obesity Science & Practice published by World Obesity and The Obesity Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1002/osp4.640",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = " 226--234",
journal = "Obesity Science & Practice",
issn = "2055-2238",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The association between sleep duration and detailed measures of obesity

T2 - A cross sectional analysis in the ADDITION-PRO study

AU - Andersen, Mie M.

AU - Laurberg, Tinne

AU - Bjerregaard, Anne Louise

AU - Sandbæk, Annelli

AU - Brage, Søren

AU - Vistisen, Dorte

AU - Quist, Jonas S.

AU - Bruun, Jens M.

AU - Witte, Daniel R.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Obesity Science & Practice published by World Obesity and The Obesity Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Background: Sleep duration is associated with BMI and waist circumference. However, less is known about whether sleep duration affects different measurements of obesity differently. Objective: To investigate the association between sleep duration and different measures of obesity. Methods: In this cross-sectional analysis 1309, Danish, older adults (55% men) completed at least 3 days of wearing a combined accelerometer and heart rate-monitor for assessing sleep duration (hours/night) within self-reported usual bedtime. Participants underwent anthropometry and ultrasonography to assess BMI, waist circumference, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, and fat percentage. Linear regression analyses examined the associations between sleep duration and obesity-related outcomes. Results: Sleep duration was inversely associated with all obesity-related outcomes, except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio. After multivariate adjustment the magnitude of associations became stronger and statistically significant for all outcomes except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio, and subcutaneous fat in women. The associations with BMI and waist circumference demonstrated the strongest associations, when comparing standardized regression coefficients. Conclusions: Shorter sleep duration were associated with higher obesity across all outcomes except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio. No specifically salient associations with local or central obesity were observed. Results suggest that poor sleep duration and obesity correlate, however, further research is needed to conclude on beneficial effects of sleep duration regarding health and weight loss.

AB - Background: Sleep duration is associated with BMI and waist circumference. However, less is known about whether sleep duration affects different measurements of obesity differently. Objective: To investigate the association between sleep duration and different measures of obesity. Methods: In this cross-sectional analysis 1309, Danish, older adults (55% men) completed at least 3 days of wearing a combined accelerometer and heart rate-monitor for assessing sleep duration (hours/night) within self-reported usual bedtime. Participants underwent anthropometry and ultrasonography to assess BMI, waist circumference, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, and fat percentage. Linear regression analyses examined the associations between sleep duration and obesity-related outcomes. Results: Sleep duration was inversely associated with all obesity-related outcomes, except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio. After multivariate adjustment the magnitude of associations became stronger and statistically significant for all outcomes except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio, and subcutaneous fat in women. The associations with BMI and waist circumference demonstrated the strongest associations, when comparing standardized regression coefficients. Conclusions: Shorter sleep duration were associated with higher obesity across all outcomes except visceral-/subcutaneous-fat-ratio. No specifically salient associations with local or central obesity were observed. Results suggest that poor sleep duration and obesity correlate, however, further research is needed to conclude on beneficial effects of sleep duration regarding health and weight loss.

KW - obesity

KW - sleep duration

KW - subcutaneous fat

KW - visceral fat

U2 - 10.1002/osp4.640

DO - 10.1002/osp4.640

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37287518

AN - SCOPUS:85140221451

VL - 9

SP - 226

EP - 234

JO - Obesity Science & Practice

JF - Obesity Science & Practice

SN - 2055-2238

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 323927418