Reid Kathryn J, Facco Francesca L, Grobman William A, Parker Corette B, Herbas Marcos, Hunter Shannon, Silver Robert M, Basner Robert C, Saade George R, Pien Grace W, Manchanda Shalini, Louis Judette M, Nhan-Chang Chia-Lang, Chung Judith H, Wing Deborah A, Simhan Hyagriv N, Haas David M, Iams Jay, Parry Samuel, Zee Phyllis C
Department of Neurology and Center for Circadian and Sleep Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Magee-Womens Research Institute & Foundation, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Sleep. 2017 May 1;40(5). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsx045.
To characterize sleep duration, timing and continuity measures in pregnancy and their association with key demographic variables.
Multisite prospective cohort study. Women enrolled in the nuMoM2b study (nulliparous women with a singleton gestation) were recruited at the second study visit (16-21 weeks of gestation) to participate in the Sleep Duration and Continuity substudy. Women <18 years of age or with pregestational diabetes or chronic hypertension were excluded from participation. Women wore a wrist activity monitor and completed a sleep log for 7 consecutive days. Time in bed, sleep duration, fragmentation index, sleep efficiency, wake after sleep onset, and sleep midpoint were averaged across valid primary sleep periods for each participant.
Valid data were available from 782 women with mean age of 27.3 (5.5) years. Median sleep duration was 7.4 hours. Approximately 27.9% of women had a sleep duration of <7 hours; 2.6% had a sleep duration of >9 hours. In multivariable models including age, race/ethnicity, body mass index, insurance status, and recent smoking history, sleep duration was significantly associated with race/ethnicity and insurance status, while time in bed was only associated with insurance status. Sleep continuity measures and sleep midpoint were significantly associated with all covariates in the model, with the exception of age for fragmentation index and smoking for wake after sleep onset.
Our results demonstrate the relationship between sleep and important demographic characteristics during pregnancy.
描述孕期的睡眠时间、时间安排和连续性指标及其与关键人口统计学变量的关联。
多中心前瞻性队列研究。在nuMoM2b研究(单胎妊娠的初产妇)中,于第二次研究访视(妊娠16 - 21周)招募女性参与睡眠时间和连续性子研究。排除年龄小于18岁、孕前糖尿病或慢性高血压的女性。女性佩戴手腕活动监测器并连续7天完成睡眠日志。对每位参与者有效的主要睡眠时段的卧床时间、睡眠时间、碎片化指数、睡眠效率、睡眠开始后觉醒时间和睡眠中点进行平均。
782名平均年龄为27.3(5.5)岁的女性提供了有效数据。睡眠时间中位数为7.4小时。约27.9%的女性睡眠时间小于7小时;2.6%的女性睡眠时间大于9小时。在包含年龄、种族/族裔、体重指数、保险状况和近期吸烟史的多变量模型中,睡眠时间与种族/族裔和保险状况显著相关,而卧床时间仅与保险状况相关。睡眠连续性指标和睡眠中点与模型中的所有协变量显著相关,但碎片化指数的年龄和睡眠开始后觉醒时间的吸烟情况除外。
我们的结果表明了孕期睡眠与重要人口统计学特征之间的关系。