| Literature DB >> 30565504 |
Liyuan Fu1,2, Xing Yu2, Wen Zhang1,2, Peipei Han2, Li Kang2, Yixuan Ma2, Liye Jia2, Hairui Yu2, Xiaoyu Chen2, Lin Hou2, Lu Wang2, Qi Guo1,2.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies report that more than half of the people over the age of 65 years suffer from variable sleep problems. In this study, we conducted a cohort study to investigate the relationship between sleep duration, muscle mass, and function within a community-dwelling, elderly Chinese population. Our study population consisted of residents living in the township central hospital of suburban Tianjin, China. We measured muscle strength and walking speed. We divided sleep duration into the following four groups: <7 hours, 7-8 hours, >8-9 hours, and >9 hours. A total of 902 participants completed the 3-year follow-up. We observed a U-shaped relationship between sleep duration and fall risk. Compared with the 7-8-hour group, fall risk within the <7-hour group was 3.67 (2.59, 5.42) times higher and fall risk within the >9-hour group was 2.35 (1.29, 3.52) times higher. After adjustment, muscle mass declined by -6.82% (-11.27%, -3.83%) in the <7-hour group. In summary, we observed a U-shaped relationship between sleep duration and falls. Short sleep duration has a negative relationship with muscle mass decline in a community-dwelling, elderly Chinese population.Entities:
Keywords: muscle function; muscle mass; sleep; suburb-dwelling
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30565504 DOI: 10.1089/rej.2018.2102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rejuvenation Res ISSN: 1549-1684 Impact factor: 4.663