Grandner Michael A, Winkelman John W
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States of America.
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 6;12(6):e0178465. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178465. eCollection 2017.
Nocturnal leg cramps (NLC) are common and poorly understood.
To determine the prevalence of NLC and associations with cardiometabolic, sleep, and behavioral risk factors in the US population.
Cross-sectional epidemiology.
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2005-2006 and 2007-2008 waves.
MAIN OUTCOME(S) AND MEASURE(S): NLC were assessed with, "In the past month, how often did you have leg cramps while trying to sleep?" Responses were categorized as None, Mild, or Moderate-Severe. Demographics, medical history, sleep disturbances, and cardiometabolic risk factors were evaluated using the 2005-2006 dataset. Variables that demonstrated significant relationships to NLC after adjusting for age, sex, education, and BMI were assessed in the 2007-2008 dataset. Variables that were still significant were entered into a forward stepwise regression model combining both waves, to determine which variables best explained the variance in NLC.
Prevalence was 24-25% reporting mild and 6% reporting moderate-severe NLC. NLC increased with age, lower education, unemployment, shorter sleep duration, all assessed sleep symptoms (nocturnal "leg jerks", snoring, snorting/gasping, difficulty falling asleep, difficulty maintaining sleep, non-restorative sleep, sleepiness, use of sleep medications), higher BMI, smoking, medical history (hypertension, heart failure, angina, stroke, arthritis, respiratory disease, and cancer), depression symptoms, and biomarkers (CRP, HbA1c, calcium, cadmium, red blood cells). Stepwise analysis showed that moderate-severe nocturnal leg cramps were associated with (in decreasing order of partial R2): leg jerks, poor overall health, arthritis, difficulty falling asleep, age, nonrestorative sleep, red blood cell count, lower education, angina, and difficulty maintaining sleep.
Based on this first large, representative study, NLC occurring >5x per month are reported by 6% of the adult US population. Sleep disturbance symptoms and health conditions are associated with higher frequency of NLC, suggesting that NLC is a marker, and possibly contributor, to poor sleep and general health.
夜间腿部痉挛(NLC)很常见,但人们对此了解甚少。
确定美国人群中NLC的患病率及其与心脏代谢、睡眠和行为风险因素之间的关联。
横断面流行病学研究。
2005 - 2006年和2007 - 2008年的国家健康与营养检查调查。
通过询问“在过去一个月里,你在试图入睡时腿部抽筋的频率是多少?”来评估NLC。回答分为无、轻度或中度 - 重度。使用2005 - 2006年数据集评估人口统计学、病史、睡眠障碍和心脏代谢风险因素。在调整年龄、性别、教育程度和体重指数(BMI)后,对与NLC有显著关系的变量在2007 - 2008年数据集中进行评估。仍具有显著性的变量被纳入一个结合两个时间段数据的向前逐步回归模型,以确定哪些变量能最好地解释NLC的变异。
报告有轻度NLC的患病率为24 - 25%,报告有中度 - 重度NLC的患病率为6%。NLC随年龄增长、教育程度较低、失业、睡眠时间较短、所有评估的睡眠症状(夜间“腿部抽搐”、打鼾、鼻鼾/喘息、入睡困难、维持睡眠困难、非恢复性睡眠、嗜睡、使用睡眠药物)、BMI较高、吸烟、病史(高血压、心力衰竭、心绞痛、中风、关节炎、呼吸系统疾病和癌症)、抑郁症状以及生物标志物(C反应蛋白、糖化血红蛋白、钙、镉、红细胞)而增加。逐步分析表明,中度 - 重度夜间腿部痉挛与以下因素相关(按偏R²降序排列):腿部抽搐、总体健康状况差、关节炎、入睡困难、年龄、非恢复性睡眠、红细胞计数、教育程度较低、心绞痛和维持睡眠困难。
基于这项首次大规模、具有代表性的研究,美国6%的成年人口报告每月发生NLC超过5次。睡眠障碍症状和健康状况与NLC的较高频率相关,这表明NLC是睡眠不佳和总体健康状况的一个标志,并且可能是其促成因素。