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Association of dietary oxidative balance score and sleep duration with the risk of mortality: prospective study in a representative US population

Liu, Jingchu; Wang, Wenjie; Wen, Ying*
Science Citation Index Expanded
哈尔滨医科大学; 浙江大学; y

摘要

Objective:We investigated the association between dietary oxidative balance score (DOBS) and mortality and whether this association can be modified by sleep duration. Design:We calculated DOBS to estimate the overall oxidative effects of the diet, with higher DOBS reflecting more antioxidant intake and less pro-oxidant intake. Cox proportional hazards models were employed to examine the associations between DOBS and all-cause, CVD and cancer mortality in the general population and people with different sleep durations. Setting:Prospective analysis was conducted using data from the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 2005-2015). Participants:A total of 15 991 US adults with complete information on dietary intake, sleep duration and mortality were included. Results:During a median follow-up of 7 & BULL;4 years, 1675 deaths were observed. Participants in the highest quartile of DOBS were significantly associated with the lower risk of all-cause mortality (hazard ratio (HR) = 0 & BULL;75; 95 % CI 0 & BULL;61, 0 & BULL;93) compared with those in the lowest. Furthermore, we found statistically significant interactions between DOBS and sleep duration on all-cause mortality (P interaction = 0 & BULL;021). The inverse association between DOBS and all-cause mortality was significant in short sleepers (HR = 0 & BULL;66, 95 % CI 0 & BULL;48, 0 & BULL;92), but not in normal and long sleepers. Conclusions:Our study observed that higher DOBS was associated with lower all-cause mortality, and this association appeared to be stronger among short sleepers. This study provides nutritional guidelines for improving health outcomes in adults, especially for short sleepers.

关键词

Oxidative stress diet nHANES sleep duration mortality