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1.
Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen ; 140(9)2020 06 16.
Artigo em Inglês, Norueguês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32549002

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Lifestyle interventions for children and adolescents with severe obesity show moderate short-term effects on weight reduction internationally. We evaluated treatment results at two Norwegian specialist outpatient clinics. MATERIAL AND METHOD: We performed a retrospective analysis of data from children and adolescents between 3 and 18 years of age collected in 2012-2016. Children and adolescents with severe obesity who attended their one-year follow-up were included. We included in the analyses the following body weight measures: percentage overweight as defined by the International Obesity Task Force cut-off (% IOTF-25); BMI standard deviation score; waist circumference standard deviation score; and body fat percentage at the start of treatment and at one-year follow-up. RESULTS: Of 568 children and adolescents who started treatment, 416 (73 %) attended the one-year check-up. A total of 271 (65 %) patients achieved a reduction in %IOTF-25, while 228 patients (55 %) reduced their BMI standard deviation score. There was a statistically significant mean reduction of all four registered body weight measurements. Altogether 54 of 325 children (17 %) changed category from severe obesity to obesity, 8 (2 %) went from severe obesity to overweight, and 8 of 91 children (9 %) changed category from obesity to overweight or normal weight. The proportion of participants with a reduction of more than 5 % in %IOTF-25 was 43 % (177/416), and a reduction in BMI standard deviation score of more than 0.25 was observed in 23 % (95/416) of participants. Girls responded on average more poorly to the intervention than boys. There was no clinically significant difference in results between the treatment centres. INTERPRETATION: After one year of treatment of children and adolescents with severe obesity in two specialist healthcare centres, we found a moderate mean reduction in weight, waist circumference and body fat percentage, but with large interindividual variation.


Assuntos
Obesidade Mórbida , Adolescente , Índice de Massa Corporal , Criança , Feminino , Humanos , Estilo de Vida , Masculino , Noruega/epidemiologia , Obesidade Mórbida/terapia , Sobrepeso , Estudos Retrospectivos
2.
J Eat Disord ; 11(1): 76, 2023 May 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37194104

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Sleep difficulties are common in patients with anorexia nervosa (AN), but objective assessments have mostly been performed in hospital and laboratory settings. We aimed to identify differences in sleep patterns between patients with AN and healthy controls (HC) in their free-living environments, and potential associations between sleep patterns and clinical symptoms in patients with AN. METHODS: This cross-sectional study analyzed 20 patients with AN prior to them starting outpatient treatment and 23 HC. Sleep patterns were measured objectively using an accelerometer (Philips Actiwatch 2) for 7 consecutive days. Average sleep onset, sleep offset, total sleep time, sleep efficiency, wake after sleep onset (WASO) and mid-sleep awakenings lasting ≥ 5 min were compared between patients with AN and HC using nonparametric statistical analyses. Associations of sleep patterns with body mass index, eating-disorder symptoms, eating-disorder-associated impairment, and symptoms of depression were assessed in the patient group. RESULTS: Compared with HC, patients with AN had shorter WASO [median (interquartile range(IQR)): 33 vs. 42 min], but a longer average duration of mid-sleep awakenings lasting ≥ 5 min [median (IQR): 9 vs. 6 min, p = 0.006] and had more nights with no sleep (six nights in four patients with AN vs. zero nights in HC). There were no differences between patients with AN and HC regarding other sleep parameters and no significant correlations between sleep patterns and clinical parameters in patients with AN. However, HC presented a Intraindividual variability pattern that was closer to a normal distribution, whereas patients with AN tended to either have very regular or large variability in sleep onset time (AN; n = 7 < 25th percentile and n = 8 > 75th percentile vs. HC; n = 4 < 25 percentile and n = 3 > 75th percentile) during the week of sleep recordings. CONCLUSION: Patients with AN seem to spend more time awake during the night and have more nights without sleep than do HC, even though their average weekly sleep duration did not differ from that in HC. The intraindividual variability in sleep pattern seems to be an important parameter that should be assessed when studying sleep in patients with AN. Trial registration ClinicalTroals.gov. Identifier: NCT02745067. Registered: April 20, 2016.


Sleep disturbances are common in patients with anorexia nervosa. However, most studies that have assessed sleep patterns in this patient group have used either sleep questionnaires or sleep-measuring instruments in surroundings different from where they usually sleep. This study compared sleep patterns between patients with anorexia nervosa and healthy individuals without an eating disorder in their home environments using an accelerometer over 1 week. The accelerometer used was a sleep-monitoring instrument that looks similar to a wristwatch and records sleep patterns using movement and light sensors, and is easy to use in the home environment. We observed that patients with anorexia nervosa on average had longer periods awake during the night, as well as more awake nights compared with healthy individuals. Nevertheless, the average sleep duration during the week of sleep recordings was similar in the two groups. However, we also observed considerable variations in sleep patterns among the patients with anorexia nervosa, ranging from very regular to very irregular sleep patterns. We therefore believe that variability in the sleep patterns among patients with anorexia nervosa is an important parameter that should be included when studying sleep in these patients.

3.
Clin Obes ; 12(1): e12493, 2022 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34781415

RESUMO

Short sleep and obstructive apneas/hypopneas have been shown to be associated with childhood obesity. Still, few studies have compared sleep in children with obesity, without suspected sleep disordered breathing and normal weight peers by objective sleep measures and compared results with subjective parent assessment of sleep. Children with obesity aged 7-13 years (N = 44) and a matched group of normal weight children (N = 42) completed clinical polysomnography (Embla A10 Recording System). Parents scored their children's sleep on the Children's Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CSHQ). Mann-Whitney U tests were used to compare groups. There was a higher obstructive apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) (median obesity = 1.20 vs. median normal  = 0.66; z = -1.33, U = 560.50, p = 0.002) and number of oxygen desaturation events per hour (median obesity = 0.7 vs. median normal  = 0.2; z = -3.45, U = 402.50, p = 0.001) in the children with obesity compared to children with normal weight. The children with obesity had a significantly longer sleep duration (median obesity 8:50 h = vs. median normal = 8:32 h; z = -2.05, U = 687.00, p = 0.041), longer stage N2 sleep (median obesity = 87 min vs. median normal = 52 min; z = -2.87, U = 576.50, p = 0. 004) and shorter REM sleep (median obesity = 94 min vs. median normal = 121 min; z = 5.05, U = 1477.00, p ≤ .001). No differences were observed for time in sleep stage N1 and N3, wake time after sleep onset or the total arousal index . Further, no group differences were found on the CSHQ sleep-disordered breathing sub-scale (p = 0.399). The children with obesity demonstrated significantly more mild to moderate sleep disordered breathing than children with normal weight, although this was not corroborated by parent report.


Assuntos
Obesidade Infantil , Síndromes da Apneia do Sono , Apneia Obstrutiva do Sono , Criança , Humanos , Obesidade Infantil/complicações , Obesidade Infantil/diagnóstico , Polissonografia , Sono , Síndromes da Apneia do Sono/diagnóstico , Síndromes da Apneia do Sono/epidemiologia
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