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Bridging the Reciprocal Gap between Sleep and Fruit and Vegetable Consumption: A Review of the Evidence, Potential Mechanisms, Implications, and Directions for Future Work.
Noorwali, E, Hardie, L, Cade, J
Nutrients. 2019;11(6)
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Both sleep disruption and a low intake of fruit and vegetables (FV) are associated with higher rates of premature death and chronic disease. This review looked at previous studies in order to determine whether there is a link between sleep and FV consumption. A recent meta-analysis found that shorter sleep duration is consistently associated with low fruit and vegetable intake in children, but in adults the association is less clear. Studies looking at the effect of sleep on FV intake had variable results. Tart cherries and kiwi fruits were the most commonly studied fruits for their effect on sleep measures. Observational studies tended to find that both short- and long-sleepers tend to eat less FV than those that sleep for 7-8 hours. A lot of evidence shows that people who go to sleep later (‘owls’) tend to consume unhealthier diets with lower intakes of FV than people who go to bed earlier (‘larks’). The researchers also looked at potential mechanisms for the association between sleep and FV intake. Polyphenols in FV may influence sleep by increasing neurotransmitters via the gut-brain axis, improving energy metabolism and through alterations in circadian rhythms and the CLOCK genes. Ways in which disrupted sleep may affect FV consumption included changes in hunger hormones, emotional stress and impaired decision making. With further research, interactions between sleep measures and FV consumption may be clarified and potentially reduce the burden of chronic diseases and premature deaths.
Abstract
A substantial burden of disease and mortality globally is attributable to both sleep disruption and low intakes of fruit and vegetable (FV) and there is increasing mechanistic and epidemiological evidence to support a reciprocal relationship between the two. This review provides an overview of experimental and observational studies assessing the relations between sleep and FV consumption from 52 human adult studies. Experimental studies are currently limited and show inconsistent results. Observational studies support a non-linear association with adults sleeping the recommended 7-9 hours/day having the highest intakes of FV. The potential mechanisms linking sleep and FV consumption are highlighted. Disrupted sleep influences FV consumption through homeostatic and non-homeostatic mechanisms. Conversely, FV consumption may influence sleep through polyphenol content via several potential pathways. Few human experimental studies have examined the effects of FV items and their polyphenols on sleep and there is a need for more studies to address this. An appreciation of the relationship between sleep and FV consumption may help optimize sleep and FV consumption and may reduce the burden of chronic diseases. This review provides implications for public health and directions for future work.
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Sleep restriction increases the neuronal response to unhealthy food in normal-weight individuals.
St-Onge, MP, Wolfe, S, Sy, M, Shechter, A, Hirsch, J
International journal of obesity (2005). 2014;38(3):411-6
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Sleep patterns influence eating behaviour and the body’s response to food. Previous studies suggest that short sleep duration leads to increased caloric intake and a desire for high-fat foods, however the specific neural mechanisms explaining how sleep restriction modulates this response is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether a specific area of the brain is activated in response to unhealthy compared with healthy foods. 25 participants were included, all of which were normal weight and had normal sleeping patterns. Each participant was tested after five nights of either 4 or 9 hours in bed by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The test was performed while the participant was shown healthy and unhealthy food photos in the fasted state. This study found that after a period of restricted sleep compared with habitual sleep, unhealthy foods led to greater activation in brain regions associated with reward compared with healthy foods. This finding provides a model of neuronal mechanisms relating short sleep duration to obesity and cardio-metabolic risk factors and warrants further investigation.
Abstract
CONTEXT Sleep restriction alters responses to food. However, the underlying neural mechanisms for this effect are not well understood. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine whether there is a neural system that is preferentially activated in response to unhealthy compared with healthy foods. PARTICIPANTS Twenty-five normal-weight individuals, who normally slept 7-9 h per night, completed both phases of this randomized controlled study. INTERVENTION Each participant was tested after a period of five nights of either 4 or 9 h in bed. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed in the fasted state, presenting healthy and unhealthy food stimuli and objects in a block design. Neuronal responses to unhealthy, relative to healthy food stimuli after each sleep period were assessed and compared. RESULTS After a period of restricted sleep, viewing unhealthy foods led to greater activation in the superior and middle temporal gyri, middle and superior frontal gyri, left inferior parietal lobule, orbitofrontal cortex, and right insula compared with healthy foods. These same stimuli presented after a period of habitual sleep did not produce marked activity patterns specific to unhealthy foods. Further, food intake during restricted sleep increased in association with a relative decrease in brain oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) activity observed in the right insula. CONCLUSION This inverse relationship between insula activity and food intake and enhanced activation in brain reward and food-sensitive centers in response to unhealthy foods provides a model of neuronal mechanisms relating short sleep duration to obesity.