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Sleep and Dietary Patterns in Pregnancy: Findings from the GUSTO Cohort

44

Citations

33

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Evidence on the association between sleep, diet, and eating behaviors in pregnant women is lacking. We examine this in a cohort of apparently healthy pregnant women. At 26-28 weeks gestation, 497 participants completed the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index to assess sleep and a 24-h recall to assess dietary intake. Diet quality was assessed by the Healthy Eating Index for pregnant women in Singapore (HEI-SGP) score and previously derived dietary patterns (vegetables-fruit-rice, seafood-noodles, and pasta-cheese-meat pattern). Eating behaviors studied included the longest night-time fasting interval, frequency of consumption occasions, energy from discretionary foods, and nighttime eating. Adjusted means were estimated between poor/good quality and short/normal sleepers using linear regressions, including covariates. Good sleep quality versus poor sleep quality, was associated with better diet quality (mean HEI-SGP 54.6 vs. 52.0; <i>p</i> = 0.032), greater adherence to the vegetables-fruit-rice pattern (mean 0.03 vs. -0.15; <i>p</i> = 0.039), lesser adherence to the seafood-noodle pattern (mean -0.14 vs. 0.03; <i>p</i> = 0.024), and a trending lower calories from discretionary foods (mean 330.5 vs. 382.6 kcal; <i>p</i> = 0.073), after adjusting for covariates. After additional adjustment for anxiety, only sleep quality and the seafood-noodle pattern remained significantly associated (<i>p</i> = 0.018). Short sleep was not associated with any diet or eating behavior. In conclusion, good sleep quality is associated with a better diet quality and a greater adherence to the vegetable-fruit-rice pattern, but with lesser adherence to the seafood-noodle diets in pregnant women.

References

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