Short REM sleep linked to overweight in
kids.
by Moon, Mary Ann
Shortened sleep duration, particularly shortened REM sleep, is
associated with overweight in children and adolescents, according to a
recent report.
Given the high prevalence of both overweight and sleep deprivation
in modern society, "family-and school-based sleep interventions
that aim to enhance sleep hygiene and increase sleep duration may have
important public health implications for the prevention and intervention
of obesity and type 2 diabetes in children," said Dr. Xianchen Liu
of Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, Pittsburgh, and associates.
The researchers investigated the possible link between short sleep
duration and overweight using data from a study of pediatric affective
disorders in which 335 children and adolescents underwent 3 consecutive
nights of polysomnography. The subjects were aged 7-17 years (mean age
11 years), 45 (13%) were overweight, and 15% were at risk for
overweight.
A total of 166 of these subjects had internalizing disorders (major
depressive disorder or anxiety disorder), 86 had no mood disorder but
were at high risk because of family history, and 83 were healthy
controls with no personal or family history of psychiatric disorder.
Overweight subjects slept approximately 22 minutes less than
normal-weight children and had significantly less REM sleep time, a
longer interval before REM sleep commenced (longer REM latency), and
less REM activity. Reduced REM time was significantly associated with
overweight in all three groups of subjects, regardless of the presence
of psychiatric disorders (Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 2008;65:924-32).
Every hour of shorter sleep time was associated with a doubling of
the risk of overweight, and every hour of shorter REM sleep time was
associated with a tripling of this risk, they noted. "'This
represents the first study to report specifically that REM sleep seems
to be the stage most strongly associated with childhood
overweight."
The mechanism underlying this link is not yet known. However, sleep
loss is known to cause metabolic and endocrine changes such as decreased
leptin levels, increased ghrelin levels, and higher rates of insulin
resistance. And some reports have linked sleep loss with increased
appetite and a preference for calorie-rich foods.
In addition, sleep loss leads to extra wake time, which means
increased opportunity for eating in any given 24-hour period. It also
increases fatigue and daytime sleepiness, which could in turn decrease
physical activity. Finally, tiredness and irritability may interfere
with inhibitory control, resulting in "less effective avoidance of
unhealthy eating," Dr. Liu and associates said.
Because this study included children with internalizing disorders,
the question of whether the results can be extrapolated to the general
population needs further research, they said. But "in the current
study, we did not fred significant differences in REM sleep time and REM
activity between children with and without internalizing
disorders," suggesting "that the REM sleep--overweight
association may exist independent of psychiatric diagnosis.'"
Although they controlled for effects of age, sex, ethnicity,
socioeconomic status, pubertal status, and psychiatric diagnosis, they
did not control for some other important variables, such as
sleep-disordered breathing, food intake, daily activity, family history
of obesity, and parental body mass index.
BY MARY ANN MOON
Contributing Writer
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