Chronotype and Sleep Timing by Race-Gender: The CARDIA Sleep Study.

IF 2.9 3区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY
Journal of Biological Rhythms Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-07 DOI:10.1177/07487304251315596
Kristen L Knutson, Kathryn J Reid, Mandy Wong, Shaina J Alexandria, S Justin Thomas, Cora E Lewis, Pamela J Schreiner, Stephen Sidney, Kiarri Kershaw, Mercedes R Carnethon
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Abstract

Chronotype indicates a person's "circadian preference," that is, the time of day when they prefer to perform certain activities (e.g. a "morning" vs "evening" person). Sleep timing is related to chronotype but is also constrained by social requirements. When sleep timing does not align with chronotype, circadian disruption can occur, and circadian disruption impairs cardiometabolic health. There are well-known racial disparities in cardiometabolic health whereby Black adults are at higher risk. It is not well-known, however, whether sleep timing within each chronotype varies between Black and White adults, which was the focus of these analyses. These data are from a cross-sectional sleep study conducted in 2020 to 2023 as an ancillary to the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) cohort study, in the United States. The Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ) captured chronotype in 2,373 participants aged 52-70 years. Chronotype was based on both overall MEQ score and question 19 categories. A subset of participants wore a wrist actigraphy monitor for ~7 days to assess sleep timing (n = 720). Our sample included 27% Black women, 17% Black men, 33% White women, and 24% White men. Mean MEQ score and chronotype distribution did not differ among race-gender groups. Among morning types, Black women and men had a later sleep start and midpoint than White women (23-34 minutes later for Black women, 32-53 minutes for Black men). Among intermediate types, Black women had significantly later sleep start (55 minutes later) and midpoint (44 minutes later), and Black men had a later sleep start (50 minutes later) than White women adjusting for age and study site. In summary, regardless of chronotype, Black adults had later sleep timing than White adults.

不同种族性别的睡眠时间和睡眠类型:CARDIA睡眠研究。
时间类型表明了一个人的“昼夜偏好”,也就是说,一天中他们喜欢做某些活动的时间(例如,“早晨”和“晚上”的人)。睡眠时间与睡眠类型有关,但也受到社会需求的限制。当睡眠时间与生物钟类型不一致时,就会发生昼夜节律紊乱,而昼夜节律紊乱会损害心脏代谢健康。众所周知,在心脏代谢健康方面存在种族差异,其中黑人成年人的风险更高。然而,黑人和白人成年人在每种睡眠类型中的睡眠时间是否有所不同,这是这些分析的重点,目前尚不清楚。这些数据来自2020年至2023年进行的一项横断面睡眠研究,作为美国年轻人冠状动脉风险发展(CARDIA)队列研究的辅助研究。晨昏性问卷(MEQ)记录了2373名年龄在52-70岁之间的参与者的时间类型。睡眠类型是基于MEQ总分和第19个问题类别。一部分参与者佩戴腕部活动监测仪约7天,以评估睡眠时间(n = 720)。我们的样本包括27%的黑人女性,17%的黑人男性,33%的白人女性和24%的白人男性。平均MEQ评分和时型分布在种族-性别组之间没有差异。在早起型人群中,黑人女性和男性的睡眠开始和中间时间都比白人女性晚(黑人女性晚23-34分钟,黑人男性晚32-53分钟)。在中间类型中,根据年龄和研究地点的不同,黑人女性的睡眠开始时间(55分钟)和中点时间(44分钟)明显晚于白人女性,黑人男性的睡眠开始时间(50分钟)也明显晚于白人女性。总之,无论睡眠类型如何,黑人成年人的睡眠时间都比白人成年人晚。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
8.60%
发文量
48
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Biological Rhythms is the official journal of the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms and offers peer-reviewed original research in all aspects of biological rhythms, using genetic, biochemical, physiological, behavioral, epidemiological & modeling approaches, as well as clinical trials. Emphasis is on circadian and seasonal rhythms, but timely reviews and research on other periodicities are also considered. The journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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