The effect of physical activity on sleep disturbance in various populations: a scoping review of randomized clinical trials.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to examine the effect of physical activity interventions, including walking, on sleep across different populations with sleep disturbances.
Results Summary
The study found that all types of physical activity, including walking, were effective for improving sleep in all populations studied, with self-tolerated PA being safe for improving sleep in the elderly and comorbid or perinatal populations.
Population
Healthy working-age adults, healthy older adults, perinatal women, patients with cancer, mental illness-related subjects, and other disease-related populations.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Promoting physical activity (PA) | increase | population PA levels | different populations experiencing sleep disturbance | - | may increase | #1 |
Promoting physical activity (PA) | increase | sleep | different populations experiencing sleep disturbance | - | may improve | #2 |
walking | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #3 |
resistance training | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #4 |
aerobic exercise | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #5 |
housework | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #6 |
water exercise | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #7 |
basketball | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #8 |
smartphone/tablet "apps" | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #9 |
web | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #10 |
online videos | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #11 |
wearable actigraphy | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #12 |
self-determined exercise | increase | sleep | all populations studied | - | effective for improving | #13 |
Self-tolerated PA | increase | sleep | the elderly | - | safe for improving | #14 |
Self-tolerated PA | increase | sleep | co-morbid or perinatal populations | - | safe for improving | #15 |
PA | increase | sleep | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | effective and safe for improving | #16 |
PA | increase | daily activity levels | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | increasing | #17 |
housekeeping | increase | sleep | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | effective for improving | #18 |
sit-to-stand repetitions | increase | sleep | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | effective for improving | #19 |
encouraging PA through web pages | increase | sleep | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | effective for improving | #20 |
encouraging PA through videos | increase | sleep | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | effective for improving | #21 |
encouraging PA through self-goal setting apps | increase | sleep | both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance | - | effective for improving | #22 |
BACKGROUND: Promoting physical activity (PA) in different populations experiencing sleep disturbance may increase population PA levels and improve sleep. This scoping review aimed to examine the effect of various PA intervention strategies on sleep across different populations, identify key sleep outcomes, and analyze knowledge gaps by mapping the relevant literature. METHODS: For this study, we systematically searched articles published till March 2022 from PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and Embase databases for randomized clinical trials (RCTs) regarding the effect of physical activity on sleep. Two authors extracted key data and descriptively analyzed the data. Thematic analysis was used to categorize the results into themes by all authors. Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review framework was used to present the findings. RESULTS: Twenty-one randomized controlled trials out of 3052 studies were finally included with 3677 participants (2852 females (78%)). Five trials were conducted in healthy working-age adults with sleep disturbance but without the diagnosis of insomnia, five in healthy older adults, two in perinatal women, four in patients with cancer, three in mental illness related subjects, and another two in other disease-related areas. PA interventions were diverse, including walking, resistance training, aerobic exercise, housework, water exercise, basketball, smartphone/tablet "apps", web, online videos or wearable actigraphy, and self-determined exercise. Three major themes were identified: (1) Sleep environment may be important to address prior to instituting PA interventions, (2) All types of PA were effective for improving sleep in all populations studied, (3) Self-tolerated PA is safe for improving sleep in the elderly and in co-morbid or perinatal populations. CONCLUSIONS: PA is effective and safe for improving sleep in both healthy and co-morbid populations with sleep disturbance by increasing daily activity levels using a variety of strategies, even low intensity, such as housekeeping, sit-to-stand repetitions, along with encouraging PA through web pages, videos, and self-goal setting apps. In addition, this scoping review identifies the need for further therapeutic research and future exploration in populations with sleep initiation or sleep maintenance disturbance.