Departments of Neurology and Medical Science, College of Medicine, Ewha Womans University and Ewha Medical Research Institute, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Contributed equally.
J Clin Sleep Med. 2021 May 1;17(5):964-972. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.9072.
The sleep patterns of humans are greatly influenced by age and sex and have various effects on overall health as they change continuously during the lifespan. We investigated age-dependent changes in sleep properties and their relation to sex in middle-aged individuals.
We analyzed data from 2,640 participants (mean age of 49.8 ± 6.8 years at baseline, 50.6% women) in the Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study, which assessed sleep habits using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and other clinical characteristics. We analyzed the sleep habit changes that occurred between baseline and a follow-up point (mean interval: 12.00 ± 0.16 years). Associations of age and sex with 9 sleep characteristics were evaluated.
Age was associated with most of the sleep characteristics cross-sectionally and longitudinally (P < .05), except for the time in bed at baseline (P = .455) and change in sleep duration (P = .561). Compared with men, women had higher Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index scores, shorter time in bed, shorter sleep duration, and longer latency at baseline (P ≤ .001). Longitudinal deterioration in Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score, habitual sleep efficiency, duration, and latency was more prominent in women (P < .001). The sex differences in these longitudinal sleep changes were mainly noticeable before age 60 years (P < .05). Worsening of Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index scores, habitual sleep efficiency, and latency was most evident in perimenopausal women. Men presented with greater advancement of chronotype (P = .006), with the peak sex-related difference occurring when they were in their late 40s (P = .048).
Aging is associated with substantial deterioration in sleep quantity and quality as well as chronotype advancement, with the degree and timing of these changes differing by sex.
人类的睡眠模式受年龄和性别影响很大,并且随着寿命的不断变化,对整体健康有各种影响。我们调查了中年个体中睡眠特性随年龄的变化及其与性别的关系。
我们分析了韩国基因组与流行病学研究中 2640 名参与者的数据(基线时的平均年龄为 49.8 ± 6.8 岁,女性占 50.6%),使用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数和其他临床特征评估睡眠习惯。我们分析了在基线和随访点之间发生的睡眠习惯变化(平均间隔:12.00 ± 0.16 年)。评估了年龄和性别与 9 种睡眠特征的关联。
年龄与大多数睡眠特征在横断面和纵向均有关联(P <.05),除了基线时的卧床时间(P =.455)和睡眠时间变化(P =.561)。与男性相比,女性的匹兹堡睡眠质量指数评分较高,卧床时间较短,睡眠时间较短,潜伏期较长(P ≤.001)。女性的匹兹堡睡眠质量指数评分、习惯性睡眠效率、持续时间和潜伏期的纵向恶化更为明显(P <.001)。这些纵向睡眠变化的性别差异主要在 60 岁之前明显(P <.05)。围绝经期女性的匹兹堡睡眠质量指数评分、习惯性睡眠效率和潜伏期恶化最为明显。男性的生物钟类型进展更为明显(P =.006),当他们处于 40 多岁后期时,性别相关差异达到峰值(P =.048)。
随着年龄的增长,睡眠质量和数量以及生物钟类型都会出现明显恶化,这些变化的程度和时间因性别而异。