医学
危险系数
置信区间
队列研究
队列
睡眠(系统调用)
心情
失眠症
比例危险模型
老年学
人口
睡眠呼吸暂停
人口学
内科学
精神科
环境卫生
社会学
计算机科学
操作系统
作者
Jenny S. W. Lee,Tung Wai Auyeung,Jason Leung,Dicken Chan,Timothy Kwok,Jean Woo,Yun Kwok Wing
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jamda.2014.05.006
摘要
Objectives Although general adult population studies show a U-shaped association between sleep duration and mortality, prolonged rather than short sleep duration was more consistently associated with higher mortality in older populations. Failing health or frailty is a possible mechanism. Thus, we examined the relationship among sleep duration, frailty status, and mortality in an elderly cohort. Methods A total of 3427 community-living adults 65 years or older were examined for general health, mood, subjective sleep measures (insomnia, napping, sleep apnea, nighttime sleep duration, sleep medications), frailty, and 5-year mortality. Results After 5 years, 12.9% of men and 4.5% of women had died. Mean nighttime sleep duration was 7.3 hours. Proportion of participants who slept 10 or more hours increased with increasing frailty. Age-adjusted hazard ratio (HR) for 5-year mortality of long nighttime sleep (≥10 hours) was 2.10 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.33–3.33) in men, and 2.70 (95% CI 0.98–7.46) in women. The HR in men was attenuated (HR 1.75; 95% CI 1.09–2.81) after adjustment for frailty and other covariates, whereas that of women strengthened (HR 2.88; 95% CI 1.01–8.18). Mortality increased sharply with nighttime sleep of 10 hours or more. Nighttime sleep of 10 or more hours (HR 1.75, men; HR 2.88, women) and frailty (HR 2.43, men; HR 2.08, P = .08 in women) were independently associated with 5-year mortality after full adjustment for covariates. Conclusion Frailty and long nighttime sleep duration of 10 or more hours were independently associated with 5-year mortality in older adults.
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