期刊
SLEEP
卷 41, 期 5, 页码 -出版社
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsy027
关键词
sleep restriction; weight loss; body composition; chronic; caloric restriction
资金
- American Heart Association [14BGIA20380706]
Study Objectives: To examine the effects of moderate sleep restriction (SR) on body weight, body composition, and metabolic variables in individuals undergoing caloric restriction (CR). Methods: Overweight or obese adults were randomized to an 8 week caloric restriction (CR) regimen alone (n = 15) or combined with sleep restriction (CR + SR) (n = 21). All participants were instructed to restrict daily calorie intake to 95 per cent of their measured resting metabolic rate. Participants in the CR + SR group were also instructed to reduce time in bed on five nights and to sleep ad libitum on the other two nights each week. Results: The CR + SR group reduced sleep by 57 +/- 36 min per day during SR days and increased sleep by 59 +/- 38 min per day during ad libitum sleep days, resulting in a sleep reduction of 169 +/- 75 min per week. The CR and CR + SR groups lost similar amounts of weight, lean mass, and fat mass. However, the proportion of total mass lost as fat was significantly greater (p = 0.016) in the CR group. This proportion was greater than body fat percentage at baseline for the CR (p = 0.0035), but not the CR + SR group. Resting respiratory quotient was reduced (p = 0.033) only in CR, and fasting leptin concentration was reduced only in CR + SR (p = 0.029). Conclusions: Approximately 1 hr of SR on five nights a week led to less proportion of fat mass loss in individuals undergoing hypocaloric weight loss, despite similar weight loss. SR may adversely affect changes in body composition and catch-up sleep may not completely reverse it.
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