Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Claudia Alvarez , Alejandro Lucia , Rodrigo Ramírez‐Campillo , Cristian Martínez‐Salazar , Pedro Delgado‐Floody , Eduardo L. Cadore , Alicia M. Alonso‐Martínez , Mikel Izquierdo
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Quality of Life and Wellness Research Group, Department of Physical Activity Sciences Universidad de Los Lagos Osorno Chile, Faculty of Sport Sciences Universidad Europea de Madrid and Research Institute ‘i+12’ Madrid Spain, Faculty of Philosophy, Department of Physical Education, Sport and Recreation Universidad de La Frontera Temuco Chile, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte - UFRN, Grupo GICAEDS, Programa de Cultura Física, Deporte y Recreación Universidad Santo Tomás Bogotá District of Columbia Colombia
ANO Não informado
TIPO Artigo
DOI 10.1002/ajhb.23303
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18

Resumo

ObjectivesWhile altered sleep patterns (ie, low sleep time) have been studied and reported in adults as a new cardiometabolic risk factor, less information is available on how sleep patterns impact children of different ethnicities. The aim of this study was to compare the levels of blood pressure and other cardiometabolic risk factors in relation to different levels of sleep time in schoolchildren of Amerindian Mapuche or European‐ancestry of Southern Chile.MethodsIn a cross‐sectional study, 540 Chilean schoolchildren (6‐13 years) were divided into two ethnic groups (n = 119 Mapuche Amerindians and n = 421 European‐ancestry). Groups were analyzed according to sleep time per day as registered by parents' report and distributed into quartile categories of sleep time: Mapuche (quartile 1 [Q1] ≥10.0 h, n = 34; Q2 9.5‐10.0 h, n = 29; Q3 8.5‐9.0 h, n = 31; and Q4 ≤ 8.5 h, n = 25), and European (Q1, n = 99; Q2, n = 77; Q3, n = 144; Q4, n = 101). The main cardiovascular parameters (systolic [SBP] and diastolic blood pressure) were complemented with anthropometric/body composition (body mass, body mass index [BMI], waist circumference, fat mass, muscle mass, lean mass), cardiorespiratory (heart rate rest, oxygen saturation), and muscle strength (handgrip of dominant and non‐dominant arm) outcomes.ResultsFrom Q1 and across Q2, Q3, and Q4, there was an increase in delta mean SBP in both Mapuche (Δ +17.6 mm Hg) and European (Δ +7.3 mm Hg) schoolchildren with 30‐90 min of decreased sleep time (using ≥10 h as reference in Q1). The tendency for worsening of other cardiometabolic risk factors was maintained for delta mean BMI (Δ +2.6 kg/m2), waist circumference (Δ +12 cm), and fat mass (Δ +8.3%) in Mapuches, whereas European peers showed only worsened waist circumference (Δ +6 cm) across Q2, Q3, and Q4 in comparison with reference Q1. There was also a higher prevalence of hypertension in Mapuche (31.1%) compared to in European schoolchildren (17.6%).ConclusionsMapuche and European schoolchildren show higher levels of SBP with a decrease in sleep time of 30 min; however, there is a higher prevalence of hypertension and obesity in ethnic Mapuches than in European schoolchildren. These findings indicate that more studies should be applied at early school ages for preventing low sleep time and their related cardiometabolic risk factors for hypertension development in different ethnic groups.

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