Association between Sleep Duration and Hypertension among Adults in Southwest China.

Jie He, Quan He
Author Information
  1. Jie He: The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, CN. ORCID
  2. Quan He: The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, CN. ORCID

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the association between sleep duration and hypertension among adults in southwest China.
Methods: Baseline variables were collected from a representative sample of 20,053 adults aged 23-98 years in southwest China who received physical examinations from January 2019 to December 2020. All participants were categorized into either a hypertension group or a non-hypertension group. Sleep duration was classified as short (<6 h/day), normal (6-8 h/day),or long (>8 h/day). Baseline variables were compared between individuals with and without hypertension by rank-sum tests for two independent samples or χ tests for nonparametric data. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to evaluate the association between sleep duration and hypertension.
Results: The overall incidence of hypertension was 51.2%. Unadjusted analysis showed that the risk of hypertension was higher in individuals with short (<6h/day) or long (>8h/day) sleep durations compared with those with a normal (6-8 h/day) sleep duration. The risk of hypertension was significantly increased by 30.1% in participants with a long (>8h/day) sleep duration compared with those with a normal (6-8h/day) sleep duration (OR = 1.301, < 0.010, 95%CI = 1.149-1.475). The risk of hypertension was also increased by 1.1% in participants with a short (<6h/day) sleep duration compared with participants with a normal (6-8h/day) sleep duration, but the difference was not significant (OR = 1.011, = 0.849, 95%CI = 0.905-1.129). After fully adjusting for confounding factors (model 4), the risk of hypertension was increased significantly (by 25%) in individuals with a short (<6h/day) sleep duration (OR = 1.25, = 0.02, 95%CI = 1.036-1.508) but not in those with a long (>8h/day) sleep duration (17.5% increase) compared with participants with a normal (6-8h/day) sleep duration (OR = 1.175, = 0.144, 95%CI = 0.946-1.460).
Conclusion: The results of this study indicate that a short (<6h/day) sleep duration is related to an increased risk of hypertension, suggesting that sleep helps to protect against hypertension.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Adult
China
Humans
Hypertension
Risk Factors
Sleep

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0sleepdurationhypertension=10participantsshortnormalcomparedriskh/daylong<6h/dayincreasedOR95%CIChinaindividuals>8h/day6-8h/daystudyevaluateassociationamongadultssouthwestBaselinevariablesgroupSleep6-8testsanalysissignificantly1%HypertensionObjective:aimedMethods:collectedrepresentativesample20053aged23-98yearsreceivedphysicalexaminationsJanuary2019December2020categorizedeithernon-hypertensionclassified<6>8withoutrank-sumtwoindependentsamplesχnonparametricdataMultivariatelogisticregressionperformedResults:overallincidence512%Unadjustedshowedhigherdurations30301<010149-1475alsodifferencesignificant011849905-1129fullyadjustingconfoundingfactorsmodel425%2502036-1508175%increase175144946-1460Conclusion:resultsindicaterelatedsuggestinghelpsprotectAssociationDurationAdultsSouthwestLongShort

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