| Literature DB >> 28848491 |
Sarah Frank1, Kelli Gonzalez2, Lorraine Lee-Ang3, Marielle C Young3,4, Martha Tamez5, Josiemer Mattei5.
Abstract
This mini-review examines the complex relationship between diet and sleep and explores the clinical and public health implications of the current evidence. Dietary quality and intake of specific nutrients can impact regulatory hormonal pathways to alter sleep quantity and quality. Sleep, in turn, affects the intake of total energy, as well as of specific foods and nutrients, through biological and behavioral mechanisms. Initial research in this field focused primarily on the effects of short sleep duration on nutritional quality. However, more recent studies have explored the dynamic relationship between long sleep duration and diet. Current evidence suggests that extremes of sleep duration alter sleep patterns, hormonal levels, and circadian rhythms, which contribute to weight-related outcomes and obesity, and other risk factors for the development of chronic disease such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. These patterns may begin as early as childhood and have impacts throughout the life course. Given that non-communicable diseases are among the leading causes of death globally, deeper understanding of the interactions between sleep and nutrition has implications for both public health and clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: diet and sleep; nutrition and sleep; sleep physiology; sleep quality; sleep quantity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28848491 PMCID: PMC5554513 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Conceptual framework for the interconnections between dietary factors, sleep, and disease. The complex, bidirectional, relationship between sleep components, dietary composition, behavioral factors, and biological factors are theorized to affect the development of chronic diseases and other health outcomes. Intake of nutrients and foods and dietary behaviors are correlated with components of sleep quality and quantity. Dietary components and eating behaviors are regulated by biological factors, which in turn may impact nutritional status. Similarly, sleep quantity and quality result in biological factors being modulated, and these biological factors control sleep factors in return. Dietary components, sleep components, and biological factors have subsequent independent as well as interactive effects on downstream health outcomes. Notably, this multifaceted interaction is evident early in life and continues throughout the life course.
Example of studies linking dietary components and sleep outcomes.
| Study design | Participants | Dietary component | Sleep outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laboratory-based intervention | Young healthy males | High-carbohydrate/low-fat (vs. low-carbohydrate/high-fat or balanced isocaloric diets) | Less slow-wave sleep | Phillips et al. ( |
| Laboratory-based experiment | Young healthy males | High-glycemic index carbohydrate meals (vs. low glycemic index) | Shortening of sleep onset latency | Afaghi et al. ( |
| Cross-sectional survey | Adults (general population) | Fat intake | Decreased sleep duration | Shi et al. ( |
| Parallel, randomized, controlled, open label trial | Men with obesity and moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea | Liquid very low energy diet followed by gradual normal food (vs. usual diet) | Improved obstructive sleep apnea | Johansson et al. ( |
| Longitudinal cohort | 3-month-old infants followed-up until age 2 | Higher energy intakes at the evening meal | Longer sleep duration | Diethelm et al. ( |
| Carbohydrates (especially from high GI or high GL foods) | ||||
| Randomized, crossover intervention | Inpatient normal weight adults | Low fiber, high-saturated fat, and sugar intake vs. | Lighter, less restorative sleep with more arousals | St-Onge et al. ( |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Healthy young adults | Tryptophan-rich diet (vs. tryptophan-low placebo protein) | Reduced sleepiness and sustained alertness in the following morning | Markus et al. ( |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial | Older adults with primary insomnia in a long-term care facility | Food supplement with melatonin, magnesium, and zinc (vs. placebo) | Improved sleep quality (getting to sleep, quality of sleep, alertness upon awakening) and sleep time | Rondanelli et al. ( |
| Cross-sectional analysis | Adults (general population) | Deficiency in vitamin B1, folate, iron, zinc, phosphorus, magnesium, and selenium | Shorter sleep duration | Grandner et al. ( |
| Cross-sectional analysis | Adults (general population) | Deficiency in alpha-carotene, selenium, calcium, vitamin D, lycopene, and vitamin C | Difficulty falling asleep, sleep maintenance, or non-restorative sleep | Grandner et al. ( |
| Double-blind, clinical trial | Adults with sleep disorders | Vitamin D supplement (vs. placebo) | Improved sleep quality, reduced sleep latency, increased sleep duration, and improved subjective sleep quality | Majid et al. ( |
| Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled parallel group trial | Healthy adults | Zinc-rich food (vs. zinc-, and astaxanthin-rich food or placebo supplemented with zinc-enriched yeast and astaxanthin oil, or placebo) | Decreased time needed to fall asleep and improved sleep efficiency | Saito et al. ( |
| Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | Healthy elderly | Fermented milk drink (vs. placebo drink) | Improved sleep efficiency and number of wakening episodes | Yamamura et al. ( |
| Randomized, double-blind, crossover | Healthy older adults with chronic insomnia | Tart cherry juice beverage (vs. placebo) | Reduction in insomnia severity | Pigeon et al. ( |
| Laboratory-based experiment | Middle-aged and elderly healthy adults | Jerte Valley cherry cultivars | Beneficial effects on sleep time, total nocturnal activity, assumed sleep, and immobility | Garrido et al. ( |
| Free-living, self-controlled diet | Adults with self-reported sleep disturbance | Kiwi fruit | Improved sleep onset, duration, and efficiency | Lin et al. ( |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled | Inpatient male adults | Atlantic salmon (vs. alternative meal, i.e., pork, beef, and chicken) | Better daily functioning | Hansen et al. ( |
| Cross-sectional analysis | Middle-aged and older adults | Oily fish consumption | Better sleep quality | Del Brutto et al. ( |
| Cross-sectional survey | Middle-school children | “Unhealthy eating habits and environments” and “snacking between meals and after supper” (identified by factor analysis) | Shorter sleep and poor sleep quality | Khan et al. ( |
| Cross-sectional analysis | Healthy adult men | Percentage of energy from protein, energy-adjusted intake of sodium, vitamin D, and vitamin B12, intake of bread, pulses, and fish and shellfish | Longer sleep duration | Komada et al. ( |