Georgia Prevention Institute (Y.X., V.A.B., R.A.H., M.A., C.W., K.N., J.L., R.C., S.S., X.W.), Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University, GA.
Center for Biotechnology and Genomic Medicine (Y.X., X.W.), Medical College of Georgia, Augusta University, GA.
Hypertension. 2023 Dec;80(12):2621-2626. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.21497. Epub 2023 Oct 6.
Circadian rhythm regulates many important biological functions in humans. The goal of this study is to explore the impact of day-to-day deviations in the sleep-wake cycle on nighttime blood pressure (BP) dipping and further examine whether the ethnic difference in day-to-day deviations in sleep patterns can explain the ethnic difference in nighttime BP dipping.
Twenty-four-hour ambulatory BP monitoring and 7-day accelerometer data were obtained from 365 adult participants (age range, 18.7-50.1 years; 52.6% Black participants and 47.3% European Americans; 64.1% females). Systolic BP dipping level was used to represent nighttime BP dipping. The SD of sleep duration was calculated as the index of sleep variability, and the SD of sleep midpoint was calculated as the index of sleep irregularity.
A 1-hour increase in the SD of sleep midpoint was associated with a 1.16% decrease in nighttime BP dipping (<0.001). A 1-hour increase in the SD of sleep duration was associated with a 1.39% decrease in nighttime BP dipping (=0.017). The ethnic difference in the SD of sleep midpoint can explain 29.2% of the ethnicity difference in BP dipping (=0.008).
Sleep variability and sleep irregularity are associated with blunted BP dipping in the general population. In addition, data from the present investigation also demonstrate that the ethnic difference in sleep irregularity could partly explain the ethnic difference in BP dipping, an important finding that may help reduce the health disparity between Black participants and European Americans.
昼夜节律调节着人类许多重要的生理功能。本研究旨在探讨睡眠-觉醒周期的日常波动对夜间血压(BP)下降的影响,并进一步研究睡眠模式日常波动的种族差异是否可以解释夜间 BP 下降的种族差异。
从 365 名成年参与者(年龄范围 18.7-50.1 岁;52.6%的参与者为黑人,47.3%为欧洲裔美国人;64.1%为女性)中获得 24 小时动态血压监测和 7 天加速计数据。收缩压下降水平用于代表夜间 BP 下降。睡眠时间的标准差(SD)被计算为睡眠变异性的指标,睡眠中点的标准差(SD)被计算为睡眠不规则性的指标。
睡眠中点 SD 增加 1 小时与夜间 BP 下降减少 1.16%(<0.001)相关。睡眠时间 SD 增加 1 小时与夜间 BP 下降减少 1.39%(=0.017)相关。睡眠中点 SD 的种族差异可以解释 BP 下降种族差异的 29.2%(=0.008)。
睡眠变异性和睡眠不规则性与一般人群中 BP 下降减弱有关。此外,本研究的数据还表明,睡眠不规则性的种族差异可能部分解释了 BP 下降的种族差异,这一重要发现可能有助于减少黑人和欧洲裔美国人之间的健康差距。