Abstract

BackgroundEvidence indicates that human circadian rhythm is affected by the intestinal microbiota, and establishment of the circadian rhythm begins during fetal development. However, the relationship between maternal fermented food intake and infant sleep duration has not been previously investigated. In this study, we examined whether dietary consumption of fermented food during pregnancy is associated with infant sleep duration at 1 year of age.MethodsThis birth cohort study used data from a nationwide government-funded study called The Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS). After exclusions from a dataset comprising 104,065 JECS records, we evaluated 72,624 mother-child pairs where the child was 1 year old. We investigated the association between dietary intake of fermented foods during pregnancy and infant sleep duration of less than 11 h at 1 year of age.ResultsMultivariable logistic regression showed that maternal intake of fermented food, especially miso, during the pregnancy was independently associated with reduced risk of infant sleep duration of less than 11 h.ConclusionsFurther research, including interventional studies, is warranted to confirm the association between consumption of fermented foods during pregnancy and sufficient infant sleep duration.Trial registrationUMIN000030786.

Highlights

  • Infants require sleep of sufficient duration and quality for healthy development

  • We examined whether dietary consumption of fermented food during pregnancy is associated with infant sleep duration at 1 year of age

  • Multivariable logistic regression showed that maternal intake of fermented food, especially miso, during the pregnancy was independently associated with reduced risk of infant sleep duration of less than 11 h

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Summary

Background

Evidence indicates that human circadian rhythm is affected by the intestinal microbiota, and establishment of the circadian rhythm begins during fetal development. We examined whether dietary consumption of fermented food during pregnancy is associated with infant sleep duration at 1 year of age

Methods
Trial registration
Introduction
Materials and methods
Discussion
Conclusion
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