학술논문

Sleep and physical activity in healthy 8–9-year-old children are affected by oily fish consumption in the FiSK Junior randomized trial.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Nutrition. Sep2021, Vol. 60 Issue 6, p3095-3106. 12p. 3 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*SLEEP disorders
*PHYSICAL activity
*SLEEP
*RISK assessment
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*FISHES
*BLIND experiment
*STATISTICAL sampling
*FISH oils
*DISEASE risk factors
Language
ISSN
1436-6207
Abstract
Purpose: Studies indicate that long-chain n-3 PUFA (n-3LCPUFA) affect sleep and physical activity (PA) in childhood. However, few studies used objective tools and none studies examined the effect of fish per se. We aimed to explore if fish consumption affected sleep and PA assessed by accelerometry in children, and if effects were modified by sex. Methods: In a randomized 12-week trial, 199 healthy 8–9-year-old children received ~ 300 g/week of oily fish or poultry. Sleep and PA were pre-specified explorative outcomes examined by accelerometers that the children wore on their hip for 7 days at baseline and endpoint, while parents registered sleep. Compliance was verified by erythrocyte n-3LCPUFA. Results: The children slept 9.4 ± 0.5 h/night but the sleep duration variability across the week was 6.0 (95%CI: 0.8, 11.1) min lower in the fish vs poultry group. Furthermore, children in the fish group exhibited increased spare time sedentary activity [9.4 (95%CI: 1.8, 16.9) min/day] at the expense of light PA [− 8.2 (95%CI: − 14.4, − 2.0) min/day]. These effects were supported by dose-dependency with n-3LCPUFA. Additionally, latency to sleep onset was reduced by 3.6 (95%CI: 1.0, 6.3) min on weekends and moderate-vigorous PA during school hours was 3.5 (95%CI: 0.1, 6.8) min longer in fish vs poultry. P values for sex interactions were all > 0.05 but the effects tended to be most pronounced on sleep in girls and PA in boys. Conclusion: Oily fish intake altered sleep and PA patterns among healthy schoolchildren, with some slight indications of sex differences. These findings warrant further investigation. Clinical trial registry: At clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02809508) and a published protocol in Trials [Damsgaard et al. in Trials, 2016]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]