男女睡眠时的能量消耗:蒸发热和感热损失。

Human nutrition. Clinical nutrition Pub Date : 1987-05-01
L Garby, M S Kurzer, O Lammert, E Nielsen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

用24 m3的直接全身量热仪测量了38名男性和21名女性受试者睡眠时的蒸发热和感热损失。这些受试者看起来都很健康,平均体重为66公斤,并且在热量计前一天进行了不同的固定体育活动计划。热量损失在晚上11点半到早上6点半之间连续测量。在7小时的睡眠中,男性和女性的平均总热量损失率(+/- s.e.m.)分别为90.6 +/- 1.21瓦和74.4 +/- 1.22瓦。在睡眠后的基础休息条件下,总热损失分别为83.8 +/- 1.5瓦和69.2 +/- 1.6瓦。在基础休息条件下,通过间接量热法测量前一天早晨醒来后约1小时的产热量,分别为85.6 +/- 1.3瓦和71.2 +/- 1.1瓦。睡眠期间热损失的增加高于基础休息条件,这在很大程度上可归因于蒸发热损失的增加。夜间,女性和男性的热量散失量分别下降了14%和30%,接近睡眠最后一小时的基础静息值。通过校正公布的夜间直肠温度下降的热损失数据,计算出男性受试者睡眠时的产热,发现其平均比热损失低9%。目前的数据以及以前报告的数据表明,睡眠的能量消耗是0.95倍BMR,而不是最近粮农组织/世卫组织/联合国大学专家咨询会议(1985年)报告的1.0倍BMR。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Energy expenditure during sleep in men and women: evaporative and sensible heat losses.

Evaporative and sensible heat losses were measured during sleep in 38 male and 21 female subjects in a direct whole-body calorimeter (24 m3). The subjects were all apparently healthy, had a mean body weight of 66 kg and had spent the preceding day in the calorimeter performing different fixed physical activity programmes. Heat losses were measured continuously between 11.30 p.m. and 6.30 a.m. The average (+/- s.e.m.) rate of total heat loss during the 7h of sleep was 90.6 +/- 1.21 and 74.4 +/- 1.22 watts for men and women respectively. The total heat loss during basal resting conditions immediately following sleep was 83.8 +/- 1.5 and 69.2 +/- 1.6 watts, respectively. Heat production during basal resting conditions, as measured by indirect calorimetry about 1 h after awakening on the morning of the preceding day, was found to be 85.6 +/- 1.3 and 71.2 +/- 1.1 watts, respectively. The increase in heat loss during sleep above that of basal resting conditions could largely be attributed to an increase in the evaporative heat loss. The heat loss fell during the night by about 14 per cent in women and about 30 per cent in men, approaching basal resting values in the last hour of sleep. Heat production during sleep was calculated for the male subjects by correcting the heat loss data for the published decreases in rectal temperature during the night and was found to be on average 9 per cent lower than the heat loss. The present data, as well as previously reported data, suggest that the energy expenditure of sleep is 0.95 X BMR rather than 1.0 X BMR as reported in the recent FAO/WHO/UNU Expert consultation (1985).

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