From the Department of Psychiatry (Wallace, Hall, Germain, Matthews, Franzen, Buysse, Reynolds, Monk, Hasler, Goldstein, Soehner), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Departments of Statistics and Biostatistics (Wallace), University of Pittsburgh; Department of Statistics (Kissel), Carnegie Mellon University; Departments of Psychology (Hall, Matthews, Roecklein, Hasler), University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; RAND Corporation (Troxel), Santa Monica, California; Department Clinical and Translational Science (Buysse, Hasler), University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Department of Psychology (Gunn), University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Department of Psychology (McMakin), Florida International University, Miami, Florida; and Department of Medicine (Szigethy), University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Psychosom Med. 2022 May 1;84(4):410-420. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000001060. Epub 2022 Jan 28.
Sleep changes over the human life span, and it does so across multiple dimensions. We used individual-level cross-sectional data to characterize age trends and sex differences in actigraphy and self-report sleep dimensions across the healthy human life span.
The Pittsburgh Lifespan Sleep Databank consists of harmonized participant-level data from sleep-related studies conducted at the University of Pittsburgh (2003-2019). We included data from 1065 (n = 577 female; 21 studies) Pittsburgh Lifespan Sleep Databank participants aged 10 to 87 years without a major psychiatric, sleep, or medical condition. All participants completed wrist actigraphy and the self-rated Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Main outcomes included actigraphy and self-report sleep duration, efficiency, and onset/offset timing, and actigraphy variability in midsleep timing.
We used generalized additive models to examine potentially nonlinear relationships between age and sleep characteristics and to examine sex differences. Actigraphy and self-report sleep onset time shifted later between ages 10 and 18 years (23:03-24:10 [actigraphy]; 21:58-23:53 [self-report]) and then earlier during the 20s (00:08-23:40 [actigraphy]; 23:50-23:34 [self-report]). Actigraphy and self-report wake-up time also shifted earlier during the mid-20s through late 30s (07:48-06:52 [actigraphy]; 07:40-06:41 [self-report]). Self-report, but not actigraphy, sleep duration declined between ages 10 and 20 years (09:09-07:35). Self-report sleep efficiency decreased over the entire life span (96.12-93.28), as did actigraphy variability (01:54-01:31).
Awareness of age trends in multiple sleep dimensions in healthy individuals-and explicating the timing and nature of sex differences in age-related change-can suggest periods of sleep-related risk or resilience and guide intervention efforts.
人类的睡眠会随着年龄的增长而发生变化,并且会在多个维度上发生变化。我们使用个体层面的横断面数据,描述了健康人类生命周期中,通过活动记录仪和自我报告睡眠维度来描述年龄趋势和性别差异。
匹兹堡寿命睡眠数据库包含了 2003 年至 2019 年在匹兹堡大学进行的与睡眠相关的研究中,参与者层面的数据。我们纳入了来自 1065 名(女性 577 名,男性 488 名;21 项研究)无重大精神、睡眠或医学状况的匹兹堡寿命睡眠数据库参与者的数据。所有参与者均完成了腕部活动记录仪和自我评估匹兹堡睡眠质量指数的检测。主要结果包括活动记录仪和自我报告的睡眠时间、效率和起始/结束时间,以及活动记录仪中中睡眠时间的变异性。
我们使用广义加性模型来检验年龄和睡眠特征之间可能存在的非线性关系,并检验性别差异。在 10 至 18 岁之间,活动记录仪和自我报告的睡眠起始时间逐渐推迟(23:03-24:10[活动记录仪];21:58-23:53[自我报告]),然后在 20 多岁时提前(00:08-23:40[活动记录仪];23:50-23:34[自我报告])。在 20 多岁中期到 30 多岁后期,活动记录仪和自我报告的醒来时间也提前了(07:48-06:52[活动记录仪];07:40-06:41[自我报告])。在 10 至 20 岁之间,自我报告的睡眠时间缩短(09:09-07:35)。整个生命周期中,自我报告的睡眠效率下降(96.12-93.28),活动记录仪的变异性也下降(01:54-01:31)。
了解健康个体中多个睡眠维度的年龄趋势,并详细说明与年龄相关的变化中性别差异的时间和性质,可以提示与睡眠相关的风险或恢复能力的时期,并指导干预措施。