4.5 Article

Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between sleep duration, sleep quality, and bone stiffness in European children and adolescents

Journal

OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 32, Issue 5, Pages 853-863

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-020-05753-x

Keywords

Bone stiffness index; Child health; Sleep duration; Sleep quality

Funding

  1. European Commission within the Sixth RTD Framework Programme [016181]
  2. European Commission [266044]
  3. Projekt DEAL

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Daytime napping was positively associated with bone stiffness, while short or long sleep duration combined with poor sleep quality was associated with less bone stiffness. The positive associations between nocturnal sleep, daytime napping, and SI depended on total sleep duration, while the long-term detrimental effect of extreme sleep duration on SI existed only in individuals with poor sleep quality.
In this large perspective cohort among European children and adolescents, we observed that daytime napping was positively associated with bone stiffness, while short or long sleep duration combined with poor sleep quality was associated with less bone stiffness. Our findings are important for obtaining optimal bone stiffness in childhood. Introduction To examine the cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between sleep duration, sleep quality, and bone stiffness index (SI) in European children and adolescents. Methods Four thousand eight hundred seventy-one children aged 2-11 years from the IDEFICS study and 861 children aged 6-15 years from the subsequent I.Family study were included. Sleep duration (i.e., nocturnal sleep and daytime napping) and sleep quality (i.e., irregularly bedtime routine, have difficulty falling asleep and trouble getting up in the morning) were reported by self-administrated questionnaires. Nocturnal sleep duration was converted into age-specific z-scores, and total sleep duration was classified into short, adequate, and long based on the National Sleep Recommendation. Calcaneal SI of both feet were measured using quantitative ultrasound. Linear mixed-effects models with country as a random effect were used, with adjustments for sex, age, pubertal status, family socioeconomic status, physical activity, screen time, body mass index, and daylight duration. Results Nocturnal sleep duration z-scores were positively associated with SI percentiles among participants with adequate sleep duration at baseline. Moreover, the positive association between daytime napping and SI percentiles was more pronounced in participants with adequate sleep duration at baseline, while at 4-year follow-up was more pronounced in participants with short sleep duration. In addition, extreme sleep duration at baseline predicted lower SI percentiles after 4 years in participants with poor sleep quality. Conclusion The positive associations between nocturnal sleep, daytime napping and SI depended on total sleep duration. Long-term detrimental effect of extreme sleep duration on SI only existed in individuals with poor sleep quality.

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