Garfield Victoria, Llewellyn Clare H, Kumari Meena
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, UK.
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, UK; Institute for Social & Economic Research, University of Essex, UK.
Prev Med Rep. 2016 Sep 20;4:512-516. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2016.09.006. eCollection 2016 Dec.
Research to date suggests that physical activity (PA) is associated with distinct aspects of sleep, but studies have predominantly focused on sleep quality, been carried out in younger adults, and have not accounted for many covariates. Of particular interest is also the reported relationship between physical activity and depression in older adults and as such, their associations with sleep duration. Here we examine the cross-sectional relation between physical activity and sleep duration in a community-dwelling sample of 5265 older adults from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. We analysed the data using multiple regression, with physical activity as a categorical exposure and sleep duration a continuous outcome, as well as testing the interaction between physical activity and depressive symptoms, which was significant ( < 0.001). We therefore stratified our analyses by depressive symptomatology. Our main finding was that, in the group with elevated depressive symptoms only, physical activity was positively associated with sleep duration in models adjusted for all covariates (age, sex, wealth, ethnicity, smoking, alcohol consumption, BMI, long-standing illness) across low [B (mean difference in sleep duration) = 25.22 min, 95% CI = (3.72; 46.72)], moderate [B = 27.92 min, 95% CI = (6.59; 49.26)] and high [B = 31.65 min, 95% CI = (7.36; 55.94)] PA groups, in comparison to the sedentary group. However, we observed no relation between physical activity and sleep duration in respondents who reported no depressive symptoms, irrespective of physical activity level ( > 0.05). Our findings suggest that a potentially effective way of improving sleep in older adults with depressive symptoms is physical activity interventions.
迄今为止的研究表明,身体活动(PA)与睡眠的不同方面相关,但研究主要集中在睡眠质量上,且多在年轻人中开展,未考虑诸多协变量。身体活动与老年人抑郁症之间的报道关系及其与睡眠时间的关联也特别值得关注。在此,我们在来自英国老龄化纵向研究的5265名社区居住老年人样本中,研究身体活动与睡眠时间的横断面关系。我们使用多元回归分析数据,将身体活动作为分类暴露因素,睡眠时间作为连续结局变量,并检验身体活动与抑郁症状之间的相互作用,该相互作用具有显著性(P<0.001)。因此,我们按抑郁症状进行分层分析。我们的主要发现是,仅在抑郁症状加重的组中,在针对所有协变量(年龄、性别、财富、种族、吸烟、饮酒、BMI、慢性病)进行调整的模型中,与久坐组相比,低强度[B(睡眠时间平均差异)=25.22分钟,95%CI=(3.72;46.72)]、中等强度[B=27.92分钟,95%CI=(6.59;49.26)]和高强度[B=31.65分钟,95%CI=(7.36;55.94)]身体活动组的身体活动与睡眠时间呈正相关。然而,在报告无抑郁症状的受访者中,无论身体活动水平如何,我们均未观察到身体活动与睡眠时间之间的关系(P>0.05)。我们的研究结果表明,对有抑郁症状的老年人而言,改善睡眠的一种潜在有效方法是进行身体活动干预。