Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity

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Standard

Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity. / Quist, Jonas Salling; Rosenkilde, Mads ; Gram, Anne Sofie; Blond, Martin Bæk; Holm-Petersen, Daniel; Hjorth, Mads Fiil; Stallknecht, Bente Merete; Sjödin, Anders Mikael.

I: Journal of Obesity, Bind 2019, 2189034, 2019.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Quist, JS, Rosenkilde, M, Gram, AS, Blond, MB, Holm-Petersen, D, Hjorth, MF, Stallknecht, BM & Sjödin, AM 2019, 'Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity', Journal of Obesity, bind 2019, 2189034. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/2189034

APA

Quist, J. S., Rosenkilde, M., Gram, A. S., Blond, M. B., Holm-Petersen, D., Hjorth, M. F., Stallknecht, B. M., & Sjödin, A. M. (2019). Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity. Journal of Obesity, 2019, [2189034]. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/2189034

Vancouver

Quist JS, Rosenkilde M, Gram AS, Blond MB, Holm-Petersen D, Hjorth MF o.a. Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity. Journal of Obesity. 2019;2019. 2189034. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/2189034

Author

Quist, Jonas Salling ; Rosenkilde, Mads ; Gram, Anne Sofie ; Blond, Martin Bæk ; Holm-Petersen, Daniel ; Hjorth, Mads Fiil ; Stallknecht, Bente Merete ; Sjödin, Anders Mikael. / Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity. I: Journal of Obesity. 2019 ; Bind 2019.

Bibtex

@article{89337f4fc58f4e70ab69fb79cd98f1bd,
title = "Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity",
abstract = "Inadequate sleep is associated with cardiometabolic risk and adiposity. Exercise has been suggested as an efficient strategy to improve sleep; however, the effects of different types of exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight and obesity are not well understood. We examined effects of active commuting and leisure-time exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight or obesity. 130 physically inactive adults (20–45 years) with overweight or class 1 obesity (body mass index: 25–35 kg/m2) were randomized to 6 months of habitual lifestyle (CON, n = 18), active commuting by bike (BIKE, n = 35), or leisure-time exercise of moderate intensity (MOD, 50% VO2peak-reserve, n = 39) or vigorous intensity (VIG, 70% VO2peak-reserve, n = 38), 5 days/week.Sleep was assessed from 7-day/night accelerometry and questionnaires at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months. 92 participants were included in a per protocol analysis. At 3 months, sleep duration was longer in VIG (29 min/night [3; 55] (mean [95% CI]), p = 0.03) but not in BIKE and MOD (p ≥ 0.11) compared with CON and was not different between groups at 6 months (p ≥ 0.36 vs. CON). At 6 months, sleep duration variability was lower in MOD (−31% [−50; −3], p = 0.03) and numerically lower in VIG (−28% [−49; 1], p = 0.06) relative to CON but was unchanged in BIKE (p = 0.17 vs. CON). The effects were, however, primarilyattributable to shorter and more irregular sleep in CON over time. Our findings suggest that effects of exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight and obesity may be restricted to leisure-time exercise with a short-term effect on sleep duration after vigorous intensity exercise (3 months) but a more regular sleep pattern after 6 months of moderate and vigorous intensity exercisecompared with physically inactive controls. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov with ID NCT01962259.",
author = "Quist, {Jonas Salling} and Mads Rosenkilde and Gram, {Anne Sofie} and Blond, {Martin B{\ae}k} and Daniel Holm-Petersen and Hjorth, {Mads Fiil} and Stallknecht, {Bente Merete} and Sj{\"o}din, {Anders Mikael}",
note = "CURIS 2019 NEXS 127",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1155/2019/2189034",
language = "English",
volume = "2019",
journal = "Journal of Obesity",
issn = "2090-0708",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of exercise domain and intensity on sleep in women and men with overweight and obesity

AU - Quist, Jonas Salling

AU - Rosenkilde, Mads

AU - Gram, Anne Sofie

AU - Blond, Martin Bæk

AU - Holm-Petersen, Daniel

AU - Hjorth, Mads Fiil

AU - Stallknecht, Bente Merete

AU - Sjödin, Anders Mikael

N1 - CURIS 2019 NEXS 127

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Inadequate sleep is associated with cardiometabolic risk and adiposity. Exercise has been suggested as an efficient strategy to improve sleep; however, the effects of different types of exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight and obesity are not well understood. We examined effects of active commuting and leisure-time exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight or obesity. 130 physically inactive adults (20–45 years) with overweight or class 1 obesity (body mass index: 25–35 kg/m2) were randomized to 6 months of habitual lifestyle (CON, n = 18), active commuting by bike (BIKE, n = 35), or leisure-time exercise of moderate intensity (MOD, 50% VO2peak-reserve, n = 39) or vigorous intensity (VIG, 70% VO2peak-reserve, n = 38), 5 days/week.Sleep was assessed from 7-day/night accelerometry and questionnaires at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months. 92 participants were included in a per protocol analysis. At 3 months, sleep duration was longer in VIG (29 min/night [3; 55] (mean [95% CI]), p = 0.03) but not in BIKE and MOD (p ≥ 0.11) compared with CON and was not different between groups at 6 months (p ≥ 0.36 vs. CON). At 6 months, sleep duration variability was lower in MOD (−31% [−50; −3], p = 0.03) and numerically lower in VIG (−28% [−49; 1], p = 0.06) relative to CON but was unchanged in BIKE (p = 0.17 vs. CON). The effects were, however, primarilyattributable to shorter and more irregular sleep in CON over time. Our findings suggest that effects of exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight and obesity may be restricted to leisure-time exercise with a short-term effect on sleep duration after vigorous intensity exercise (3 months) but a more regular sleep pattern after 6 months of moderate and vigorous intensity exercisecompared with physically inactive controls. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov with ID NCT01962259.

AB - Inadequate sleep is associated with cardiometabolic risk and adiposity. Exercise has been suggested as an efficient strategy to improve sleep; however, the effects of different types of exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight and obesity are not well understood. We examined effects of active commuting and leisure-time exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight or obesity. 130 physically inactive adults (20–45 years) with overweight or class 1 obesity (body mass index: 25–35 kg/m2) were randomized to 6 months of habitual lifestyle (CON, n = 18), active commuting by bike (BIKE, n = 35), or leisure-time exercise of moderate intensity (MOD, 50% VO2peak-reserve, n = 39) or vigorous intensity (VIG, 70% VO2peak-reserve, n = 38), 5 days/week.Sleep was assessed from 7-day/night accelerometry and questionnaires at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months. 92 participants were included in a per protocol analysis. At 3 months, sleep duration was longer in VIG (29 min/night [3; 55] (mean [95% CI]), p = 0.03) but not in BIKE and MOD (p ≥ 0.11) compared with CON and was not different between groups at 6 months (p ≥ 0.36 vs. CON). At 6 months, sleep duration variability was lower in MOD (−31% [−50; −3], p = 0.03) and numerically lower in VIG (−28% [−49; 1], p = 0.06) relative to CON but was unchanged in BIKE (p = 0.17 vs. CON). The effects were, however, primarilyattributable to shorter and more irregular sleep in CON over time. Our findings suggest that effects of exercise on sleep in individuals with overweight and obesity may be restricted to leisure-time exercise with a short-term effect on sleep duration after vigorous intensity exercise (3 months) but a more regular sleep pattern after 6 months of moderate and vigorous intensity exercisecompared with physically inactive controls. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov with ID NCT01962259.

U2 - 10.1155/2019/2189034

DO - 10.1155/2019/2189034

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31089425

VL - 2019

JO - Journal of Obesity

JF - Journal of Obesity

SN - 2090-0708

M1 - 2189034

ER -

ID: 216823660