Kaplan Katherine A, Hardas Prajesh P, Redline Susan, Zeitzer Jamie M
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA; Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Sleep Med. 2017 Jun;34:162-167. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2017.03.004. Epub 2017 Mar 27.
In older adults, traditional metrics derived from polysomnography (PSG) are not well correlated with subjective sleep quality. Little is known about whether the association between PSG and subjective sleep quality changes with age, or whether quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) is associated with sleep quality. Therefore, we examined the relationship between subjective sleep quality and objective sleep characteristics (standard PSG and qEEG) across middle to older adulthood.
Using cross-sectional analyses of 3173 community-dwelling men and women aged between 39 and 90 participating in the Sleep Heart Health Study, we examined the relationship between a morning rating of the prior night's sleep quality (sleep depth and restfulness) and polysomnographic, and qEEG descriptors of that single night of sleep, along with clinical and demographic measures. Multivariable models were constructed using two machine learning methods, namely lasso penalized regressions and random forests.
Little variance was explained across models. Greater objective sleep efficiency, reduced wake after sleep onset, and fewer sleep-to-wake stage transitions were each associated with higher sleep quality; qEEG variables contributed little explanatory power. The oldest adults reported the highest sleep quality even as objective sleep deteriorated such that they would rate their sleep better, given the same level of sleep efficiency. Despite this, there were no major differences in the predictors of subjective sleep across the age span.
Standard metrics derived from PSG, including qEEG, contribute little to explaining subjective sleep quality in middle-aged to older adults. The objective correlates of subjective sleep quality do not appear to systematically change with age despite a change in the relationship between subjective sleep quality and objective sleep efficiency.
在老年人中,多导睡眠图(PSG)得出的传统指标与主观睡眠质量的相关性不佳。关于PSG与主观睡眠质量之间的关联是否随年龄变化,或者定量脑电图(qEEG)是否与睡眠质量相关,人们知之甚少。因此,我们研究了从中年到老年期主观睡眠质量与客观睡眠特征(标准PSG和qEEG)之间的关系。
我们对参与睡眠心脏健康研究的3173名年龄在39至90岁之间的社区居住男性和女性进行横断面分析,研究前一晚睡眠质量的早晨评分(睡眠深度和安宁程度)与该晚睡眠的多导睡眠图及qEEG描述指标之间的关系,同时纳入临床和人口统计学指标。使用套索惩罚回归和随机森林这两种机器学习方法构建多变量模型。
各模型解释的方差很小。更高的客观睡眠效率、入睡后觉醒时间减少以及睡眠-觉醒阶段转换次数减少均与更高的睡眠质量相关;qEEG变量的解释力很小。即使客观睡眠状况恶化,但在相同睡眠效率水平下,年龄最大的成年人报告的睡眠质量最高,即他们会给自己的睡眠打出更高的分数。尽管如此,在整个年龄跨度内,主观睡眠的预测因素没有重大差异。
包括qEEG在内的PSG得出的标准指标,对解释中年至老年成年人的主观睡眠质量贡献不大。尽管主观睡眠质量与客观睡眠效率之间的关系发生了变化,但主观睡眠质量的客观相关因素似乎并未随年龄系统性地改变。