Chen Weirong, Shen Yingying, Song Shina, Li Xiaofeng
Department of Neurololgy, Shanxi Provincial Integrated Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine Hospital, Taiyuan, Shanxi, China.
Department of Critical Care Medicine, Taihe Hospital, Hubei University of Medicine, Shiyan, Hubei, China.
Eur J Med Res. 2025 Jan 3;30(1):2. doi: 10.1186/s40001-024-02227-2.
Sleep disturbance is a common concern among stroke survivors, yet the association of sleep duration and sleep disorders with post-stroke depression and all-cause and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality remains elusive. We aimed to explore these associations using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).
Adult stroke survivors from NHANES 2005-2018 were included. Sleep information and stroke diagnoses were derived from self-reports on relevant questionnaires. Mortality data were collected by prospectively matching to the National Death Index. Multivariate logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards regression were used to explore these associations and calculate the odds ratio (OR) and hazard ratio (HR), respectively.
A total of 1101 stroke participants were included. In the fully adjusted model, sleep disorders were associated with increased odds of post-stroke depression (OR 2.689, p = 0.0146). Sleep duration was inversely associated with the odds of post-stroke depression; compared to normal sleep duration, short sleep duration was associated with increased odds of post-stroke depression (OR 2.196, p = 0.0059), whereas long sleep duration was not (p = 0.1435). Sleep disorders were associated with CVD mortality (HR of 1.948, p = 0.026) but not all-cause mortality (p = 0.224) in stroke survivors. Sleep duration was positively associated with all-cause mortality in stroke survivors (HR 1.075, p = 0.042); however, neither short nor long sleep duration was associated with mortality compared to normal sleep duration. Restricted cubic spline modeling suggested that sleep duration was nonlinearly and linearly associated with post-stroke depression and all-cause mortality, respectively. Age influenced the association between sleep disorders and CVD mortality in stroke survivors.
Sleep disorders and short sleep duration were associated with increased odds of post-stroke depression, whereas sleep disorders were associated with increased CVD mortality in stroke survivors. These findings underscore that achieving normal sleep duration and improving sleep disorders may reduce the odds of post-stroke depression and mortality.
睡眠障碍是中风幸存者普遍关注的问题,然而睡眠时间和睡眠障碍与中风后抑郁以及全因死亡率和心血管疾病(CVD)死亡率之间的关联仍不明确。我们旨在利用国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)的数据来探究这些关联。
纳入了2005 - 2018年NHANES中的成年中风幸存者。睡眠信息和中风诊断来自相关问卷的自我报告。通过前瞻性匹配国家死亡指数收集死亡率数据。采用多变量逻辑回归和Cox比例风险回归分别探究这些关联并计算比值比(OR)和风险比(HR)。
共纳入1101名中风参与者。在完全调整模型中,睡眠障碍与中风后抑郁几率增加相关(OR 2.689,p = 0.0146)。睡眠时间与中风后抑郁几率呈负相关;与正常睡眠时间相比,短睡眠时间与中风后抑郁几率增加相关(OR 2.196,p = 0.0059),而长睡眠时间则不然(p = 0.1435)。睡眠障碍与中风幸存者的CVD死亡率相关(HR为1.948,p = 0.026),但与全因死亡率无关(p = 0.224)。睡眠时间与中风幸存者的全因死亡率呈正相关(HR 1.075,p = 0.042);然而,与正常睡眠时间相比,短睡眠时间和长睡眠时间均与死亡率无关。受限立方样条模型表明,睡眠时间分别与中风后抑郁和全因死亡率呈非线性和线性关联。年龄影响中风幸存者睡眠障碍与CVD死亡率之间的关联。
睡眠障碍和短睡眠时间与中风后抑郁几率增加相关,而睡眠障碍与中风幸存者的CVD死亡率增加相关。这些发现强调,实现正常睡眠时间和改善睡眠障碍可能会降低中风后抑郁和死亡率。