Demographic, Pregnancy-Related, and Health-Related Factors in Association with Changes in Sleep Among Pregnant Women with Overweight or Obesity.

2020 
BACKGROUND: Women with prepregnancy overweight/obesity are at high risk for obstetric complications and cardiometabolic disease. Poorer sleep quality is associated with obesity in non-pregnant individuals and, during pregnancy, poor sleep predicts negative obstetric and health outcomes. This study examined sleep patterns among women with overweight/obesity and factors associated with different sleep trajectories during pregnancy. METHODS: Women (N = 146, 17-40 years old) with a prepregnancy body mass index ≥ 25 kg/m2 were recruited during early pregnancy. Participants reported demographic information and completed the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) at up to six monthly assessments, with the first assessment occurring between 12 and 20 weeks gestation and the final assessment between 35 weeks gestation and delivery. PSQI scores > 5 indicate "poor sleep. RESULTS: On average, women's PSQI scores were 6.66 ± 3.58 in the first half of pregnancy and were significantly higher (worse) at the end of pregnancy (t(644) = 4.55, p   0.08). The percentage of women with PSQI scores > 5 (the threshold for poor sleep quality) was 37-63% across assessments, with the greatest increase occurring during the third trimester (t(633) = 2.92, p = 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: Sleep quality worsens during the third trimester and is associated with current smoking. Future studies of sleep during pregnancy should examine health outcomes among women with overweight/obesity and early intervention to mitigate sleep disturbances as pregnancy progresses.
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