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一项基于人群的研究表明,睡眠时间减少与高血压有关:这种关联在绝经前女性中可能最为明显。

A population-based study of reduced sleep duration and hypertension: the strongest association may be in premenopausal women.

机构信息

Health Sciences Research Institute, University of Warwick Medical School, Coventry, United Kingdom.

出版信息

J Hypertens. 2010 May;28(5):896-902. doi: 10.1097/HJH.0b013e328335d076.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Recent evidence indicates that reduced sleep duration may be associated with an increased risk of hypertension with possibly stronger effects among women than men. We therefore examined cross-sectional sex-specific associations of sleep duration with hypertension in a large population-based sample from the Western New York Health Study (1996<2001).

METHODS

Participants were 3027 white men (43.5%) and women (56.5%) without prevalent cardiovascular disease (median age 56 years). Hypertension was defined as blood pressure at least 140 or at least 90&mmHg or regular use of antihypertensive medication. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to estimate odds ratios (ORs) of hypertension comparing less than 6&h of sleep per night versus the reference category (&6&h) while accounting for a number of potential confounders.

RESULTS

In multivariate analyses, less than 6&h of sleep was associated with a significant increased risk of hypertension compared to sleeping at least 6&h per night, only among women [OR&=&1.66 (1.09 to 2.53)]. No significant association was found among men [OR&=&0.93 (0.62 to 1.41)].In subgroup analyses by menopausal status, the effect was stronger among premenopausal women [OR&=&3.25 (1.37 to 7.76)] than among postmenopausal women [OR&=&1.49 (0.92 to 2.41)].

CONCLUSION

Reduced sleep duration, by increasing the risk of hypertension, may produce detrimental cardiovascular effects among women. The association is independent of socioeconomic status, traditional cardiovascular risk factors, and psychiatric comorbidities, and is stronger among premenopausal women. Prospective and mechanistic evidence is necessary to support causality.

摘要

目的

最近的证据表明,睡眠时间减少可能与高血压风险增加有关,而这种关联在女性中比男性更强。因此,我们在西方纽约健康研究(1996-2001 年)的大型人群样本中,检查了睡眠时间与高血压的横断面性别特异性关联。

方法

参与者为 3027 名无心血管疾病的白种男女(男性占 43.5%,女性占 56.5%,平均年龄 56 岁)。高血压定义为血压至少 140/90mmHg 或正在使用降压药物。采用多变量逻辑回归分析,比较每晚睡眠时间少于 6 小时与参考组(&6 小时)相比,估计高血压的比值比(OR),同时考虑了许多潜在的混杂因素。

结果

在多变量分析中,与每晚至少睡 6 小时相比,每晚睡眠时间少于 6 小时与女性高血压的风险显著增加相关[OR=&=&1.66(1.09 至 2.53)]。男性则无明显相关性[OR=&=&0.93(0.62 至 1.41)]。按绝经状态进行亚组分析,绝经前女性的影响更强[OR=&=&3.25(1.37 至 7.76)],绝经后女性的影响较弱[OR=&=&1.49(0.92 至 2.41)]。

结论

睡眠时间减少通过增加高血压风险,可能对女性产生不良的心血管影响。这种关联独立于社会经济地位、传统心血管危险因素和精神共病,并且在绝经前女性中更强。需要前瞻性和机制性证据来支持因果关系。

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