Sleep Irregularity Is Associated With Hypertension: Findings From Over 2 Million Nights With a Large Global Population Sample.

Hypertension

Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health and Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute (FHMRI) Sleep Health, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia (H.S., B.L., A.G., A.C.R., N.L., G.N., S.A., R.A., P.C., D.J.E.).

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Irregular sleep patterns, including changes in sleep duration and timing, may increase the risk of hypertension, as indicated by a study involving over 12,000 adults.
  • The study found that disruptions in sleep duration were linked to a 9% to 17% increase in hypertension risk, while specific timing irregularities like late sleep onset resulted in a 32% increase in hypertension.
  • These results suggest that both sleep irregularity in duration and timing are important factors for cardiovascular health, warranting further research on their effects on blood pressure and heart health.

Article Abstract

Background: Irregularities in sleep duration and sleep timing have emerged as potential risk factors for hypertension. This study examined associations between irregularity in sleep duration and timing with hypertension in a large, global sample over multiple months.

Methods: Data from 12 287 adults, who used an under-mattress device to monitor sleep duration and timing and also provided blood pressure recordings on ≥5 separate occasions, were analyzed. Sleep duration irregularity was assessed as the SD in total sleep time across the ≈9-month recording period. Sleep timing irregularity was assessed as SDs in sleep onset time, sleep midpoint, and sleep offset time. Logistic regressions were conducted to investigate associations between sleep irregularity and hypertension, defined as median systolic blood pressure ≥140 mm Hg or median diastolic blood pressure ≥90 mm Hg.

Results: Participants were middle-aged (mean±SD, 50±12 years), mostly men (88%) and overweight (body mass index, 28±6 kg/m). Sleep duration irregularity was consistently associated with an ≈9% to 17% increase in hypertension independently of the total sleep time. A ≈34-minute increase in sleep onset time irregularity was associated with a 32% increase in hypertension (1.32 [1.20-1.45]). A 32-minute increase in sleep midpoint irregularity was associated with an 18% increase in hypertension (1.18 [1.09-1.29]), while a 43-minute increase in sleep offset time irregularity was associated with an 8.9% increase in hypertension (1.09 [1.001-1.18]).

Conclusions: These findings support that sleep irregularity, both in duration and timing, is a risk marker for poor cardiovascular health. Further mechanistic investigations of temporal relationships between day-to-day fluctuations in sleep duration and timing, next-day blood pressure, and other cardiovascular outcomes are warranted.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.122.20513DOI Listing

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