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(Stroke. 2008;39:3185.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From Department of Epidemiology (J.-C.C.), University of North Carolina School of Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC; Department of Family and Community Medicine (R.L.B.), University of Nevada School of Medicine, Reno, Nev; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (H.R., J.C.L.), Seattle, Wash; Department of Epidemiology and Population Health (S.W.-S.), Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY; Department of Psychology (D.W.L.), University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC; Department of Family and Preventive Medicine (M.A.), University of California San Diego, La Jolla, Calif; Wake Forest University School of Medicine (M.J.N.), Winston-Salem, NC; Department of Medicine (M.L.S.), Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.
Correspondence to Jiu-Chiuan Chen, MD, MPH, ScD, Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina School of Public Health, 2104G, McGavran-Greenberg, CB#7435, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7435. E-mail jcchen{at}unc.edu
Background and Purpose— Many studies have shown a U-shape association between sleep duration and mortality, but epidemiological evidence linking cardiovascular diseases with habitual sleep patterns is limited and mixed.
Methods— We conducted a prospective study on 93 175 older women (aged 50 to 79 years) in the Womens Health Initiative Observational study cohort to examine the risk of ischemic stroke in relation to self-reported sleep duration. Cox models were used to investigate the putative associations, adjusting for multiple sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, depression, snoring, sleepiness symptoms, and other cardiovascular disease-related clinical characteristics.
Results— At baseline, 8.3% of subjects had reported their sleep duration as
5 hours per night and 4.6% reported long duration of sleep (
9 hours/night). After an average of 7.5 years of follow-up, 1166 cases of ischemic stroke had occurred. Multivariable-adjusted relative risk (RR) and 95% CI for ischemic stroke (using a sleep time of 7 hours/night as the reference) were 1.14 (0.97, 1.33), 1.24 (1.04, 1.47), and 1.70 (1.32, 2.21) for women reporting
6, 8, and
9 hours of sleep. A modestly stronger association with sleep duration
6 hours per night (RR, 1.22; 1.03, 1.44) was noted among women without prevalent cardiovascular disease at baseline. Our analyses also reveal that the adverse effect of long sleep is likely independent of the increased risk for ischemic stroke associated with frequent snoring and sleepiness (RR, 1.31; 1.00, 1.72).
Conclusions— Habitual sleep patterns are important neurobehavioral determinants of risk for ischemic stroke in postmenopausal women. The underlying neurobiology and mechanistic mediators for the putative adverse effect of long sleep (
9 hours/night) need further elucidation.
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