Association of sleep trajectory in adulthood with risk of hypertension and its related risk factors: The China Health and Nutrition Survey
Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine Feb 08, 2020
Wang Y, et al. - Using Multivariate cox regression models and General linear regression models, researchers explored the relationship of sleep duration trajectories with the risk of hypertension and its related factors. Weight longitudinal data were used for 7,397 adults who provided valid responses in the questionnaire regarding sleep and hypertension information from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (2004-2011). Subgroup analyses were included 5,532 candidates who used blood samples to measure hypertension-related factors. The trajectory showing persistent decrease as aging was significantly associated with increased risk of hypertension compared with stable sleep duration around 8 hours, whereas no significant association was observed between trajectory showing an increase to 9 hours as aging and risk of hypertension. Decreasing sleep duration as aging is associated significantly with increased risk of hypertension and higher levels of its biomarkers during adulthood.
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