Association of self-reported sleep duration and hypertension: Results of a Chinese prospective cohort study
Objectives: To examined the association of self-reported sleep duration and hypertension using the data from Tianjin China.Methods: Participants aged 40-70 years without hypertension were recruited with a stratified cluster sampling method across six districts of Tianjin, China.Information regarding their sociodemographic and lifestyle-related characteristics was gathered by questionnaires.After 2 years follow-up, the second physical examination was taken on the same crowd.Results: During the 2-year period, 874 subjects (221 men, 653 women) were successfully contacted.Multivariate logistic regression was used to analyze the relationship between the frequency of incident hypertension after the 2-year follow-up and sleep duration according to age groups.Among the younger age group (40 to <55 years), a short sleep duration (≤ 4.9 h) was associated with a significantly higher risk of hypertension compared with sleeping for 7-8 hours in unadjusted analyses (OR: 3.15 ”95% CI: 1.04 to 9.54”).In a model after adjustment for the impact factors, a significant difference was also found in the frequency of incident hypertension.Conclusions: In our study, an short sleep duration (≤ 4.9 h) is a significant risk factor for hypertension in younger subjects, with no association among older subjects.
hypertension pre-hypertension Ideal blood pressure sleep duration age sex
Xianming Wu Yuemin Sun Kaijun Niu Wei Yao BO Bian Xuefang Yu Huanhuan Zhao Jingjing Huang
Department of Cardiology, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital, Tianjin, China Department of Nutrition and Food Science, School of Public Health, Tianjin Medical University, Tianj
国内会议
天津高血压论坛2016暨天津市医师协会高血压专业委员会第一届年会
天津
英文
156-166
2016-11-01(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)