Relationships between chronotype, social jetlag, sleep, obesity and blood pressure in healthy young adults

Jan 22, 2019Chronobiology international

How sleep patterns, body weight, and blood pressure are linked to internal clocks and social jetlag in healthy young adults

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Abstract

Sleep latency of 12 minutes or more is associated with increased odds of a high waist-to-height ratio (OR = 1.37; CI: 1.03-1.84) and elevated systolic blood pressure (OR = 1.90; CI: 1.15-3.16, p = 0.02) among morning chronotypes.

  • Chronotype, social jetlag, and sleep disturbances may influence metabolic risk factors for chronic diseases.
  • Poor sleep metrics, such as total sleep time less than 6 hours and sleep efficiency below 85%, were linked to higher body fat and waist-to-hip ratios in morning chronotypes.
  • No independent associations were found between chronotype or social jetlag and anthropometric outcomes or blood pressure.
  • Evening chronotypes did not show relationships between poor sleep and obesity or elevated blood pressure.
  • Findings indicate that sleep-related metabolic alterations may vary by chronotype, particularly among morning types.

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