| Literature DB >> 33280611 |
Shireen Sindi1,2, Laura Monica Pérez3,4, Davide L Vetrano3,5, Federico Triolo3, Ingemar Kåreholt3,6, Linnea Sjöberg3, Alexander Darin-Mattsson3, Miia Kivipelto7,8,9,10,11, Marco Inzitari4,12, Amaia Calderón-Larrañaga3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sleep disturbances are prevalent among older adults and are associated with various individual diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate whether sleep disturbances are associated with the speed of multimorbidity development among older adults.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Cardiovascular; Multimorbidity; Musculoskeletal; Neuropsychiatric; Sleep disturbances
Year: 2020 PMID: 33280611 PMCID: PMC7720467 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01846-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Baseline distribution of sociodemographic, clinical, and lifestyle characteristics by presence and severity of sleep disturbances
| No disturbances, | Mild disturbances | Moderate–severe disturbances | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 67.6 (7.8) | 67.9 (8.3) | 65.9 (8.1) | 0.504 | |
| Female | 56.3 (538) | 64.0 (112) | 69.5 (41) | |
| Male | 43.7 (417) | 36.0 (63) | 30.5 (18) | |
| 0.332 | ||||
| Elementary | 10.4 (99) | 8.0 (14) | 17.0 (10) | |
| High school | 46.1 (439) | 44.6 (78) | 39.0 (23) | |
| University | 43.5 (414) | 47.4 (83) | 44.0 (26) | |
| Inadequate | 18.2 (174) | 16.0 (28) | 33.9 (20) | |
| Health-enhancing | 50.3 (480) | 57.7 (101) | 54.2 (32) | |
| Fitness-enhancing | 31.5 (301) | 26.3 (46) | 11.9 (7) | |
| 0.214 | ||||
| Never | 43.3 (410) | 43.7 (76) | 42.4 (25) | |
| Former | 37.7 (358) | 43.1 (75) | 45.8 (27) | |
| Current | 19.0 (180) | 13.2 (23) | 11.8 (7) | |
| 0.097 | ||||
| Never | 20.6 (195) | 20.6 (36) | 33.8 (20) | |
| Light–moderate | 61.8 (589) | 57.7 (101) | 49.2 (29) | |
| Heavy | 17.6 (169) | 21.6 (38) | 17.0 (10) | |
| 0.380 | ||||
| Underweight | 1.0 (9) | 0.0 (0) | 1.7 (1) | |
| Normal weight | 45.3 (426) | 47.7 (83) | 39.0 (23) | |
| Overweight | 42.3 (398) | 37.3 (65) | 42.3 (25) | |
| Obesity | 11.4 (107) | 15.0 (26) | 17.0 (10) | |
| 7.1 (68) | 22.3 (39) | 25.4 (15) | ||
| 1.1 (10) | 5.8 (10) | 14.3 (8) | ||
| 22.8 (217) | 34.5 (60) | 47.5 (28) |
*Obtained through the chi-squared test or the Kruskal–Wallis test, as appropriate
aPsychotropic drugs include anxiolytics, hypnotics, sedatives, antipsychotics, and antidepressants
bDepression defined according to the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS); scores > 9 indicate depression
cSelf-reported presence of any pain in the last month
¥Categories 1–2 “Slight difficulty dropping off to sleep or slightly reduced, light or fitful sleep” of the CPRS question on sleeping problems
§Categories 3–4 “Sleep reduced or broken by at least two hours” and 5–6 “Less than two or three hours of sleep” of the CPRS question on sleeping problems
Type of disturbances among subjects reporting sleep disturbances in the study sample
| Total, | < 78 years | ≥ 78 years | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male, | Female, | Male, | Female, | ||
| Problems to fall asleep, % ( | 39.1 (90) | 30.9 (21) | 42.5 (51) | 45.5 (5) | 43.3 (13) |
| Waking up during night, % ( | 86.5 (199) | 89.7 (61) | 82.6 (100) | 90.9 (10) | 93.3 (28) |
| Not being able to fall back asleep, % ( | 38.4 (84) | 27.7 (18) | 43.4 (49) | 27.3 (3) | 46.7 (14) |
| Waking up too early, % ( | 51.6 (116) | 51.5 (34) | 52.1 (62) | 45.5 (5) | 51.7 (15) |
| Feeling tired > 2 h during the day, % ( | 4.4 (10) | 6.0 (4) | 4.1 (5) | 9.1 (1) | 100.0 (30) |
| Taking sleeping drugs, % ( | 28.6 (65) | 16.4 (11) | 30.0 (36) | 27.3 (3) | 50.0 (15) |
| Total sleep duration < 6 h*, % ( | 27.1 (61) | 27.3 (18) | 25.0 (30) | 27.3 (3) | 35.7 (10) |
*Defined as short sleep duration by Gildner et al. [9]
Association between sleep disturbances at baseline and rate of chronic diseases accumulation throughout the 9-year follow-up
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.018 (0.032) | 0.574 | 0.019 (0.032) | 0.539 | 0.022 (0.032) | 0.496 | |
| 0.145 (0.053) | 0.147 (0.053) | 0.142 (0.054) | ||||
ß coefficients for the interaction term between time and the exposure, obtained through linear mixed models.
Model 1: adjusted by sex, age, and education level
Model 2: adjusted additionally by physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption, and BMI
Model 3: adjusted additionally by the presence of depression (MADRS score > 9), presence of any pain, psychotropic medication, and presence of one chronic disease at baseline
¥Categories 1–2 “Slight difficulty dropping off to sleep or slightly reduced, light or fitful sleep” of the CPRS question on sleeping problems
§Categories 3–4 “Sleep reduced or broken by at least two hours” and 5–6 “Less than two or three hours of sleep” of the CPRS question on sleeping problems
Association between sleep disturbances at baseline and rate of cardiovascular (CV), neuropsychiatric (NP), and musculoskeletal (MSK) chronic disease accumulation throughout the 9-year follow-up
| CV diseases | NP diseases | MSK diseases | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| − 0.012 (0.011) | 0.267 | 0.008 (0.009) | 0.419 | − 0.003 (0.010) | 0.735 | |
| 0.001 (0.018) | 0.995 | 0.041 (0.016) | 0.038 (0.017) | |||
ß coefficients for the interaction term between time and the exposure, obtained through linear mixed models. Models adjusted by sex, age, education level, physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption, BMI, presence of depression (MADRS score > 9) except for the model with NP diseases as the outcome, presence of pain, psychotropic medication, and presence of one chronic disease at baseline. Cardiovascular diseases: ischemic heart disease, heart failure, atrial fibrillation, cerebrovascular disease, cardiac valve diseases, bradycardias or conduction diseases, peripheral vascular disease, and other cardiovascular diseases. Neuropsychiatric diseases: depression and mood diseases, dementia, neurotic or stress-related and somatoform diseases, migraine and facial pain syndromes, peripheral neuropathy, Parkinson or parkinsonism, epilepsy, schizophrenia and delusional diseases, multiple sclerosis, other psychiatric or behavioral diseases, and other neurological diseases. Musculoskeletal diseases: dorsopathies, inflammatory arthropathies, osteoarthritis and other degenerative joint diseases, osteoporosis, and other musculoskeletal and joint diseases
¥Categories 1–2 “Slight difficulty dropping off to sleep or slightly reduced, light or fitful sleep” of the CPRS question on sleeping problems
§Categories 3–4 “Sleep reduced or broken by at least two hours” and 5–6 “Less than two or three hours of sleep” of the CPRS question on sleeping problems
Fig. 1Predicted number of neuropsychiatric (NP) and musculoskeletal (MSK) chronic diseases over the 9-year follow-up in relation to the presence and severity of sleep disturbances at baseline
ß coefficients for the interaction term between time and the exposure, obtained through linear mixed models. Models adjusted by sex, age, education level, physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption, BMI, presence of depression (MADRS score > 9) except for the model with NP diseases as the outcome, presence of pain, psychotropic medication, and presence of any chronic disease. Neuropsychiatric diseases: depression and mood diseases, dementia, neurotic or stress-related and somatoform diseases, migraine and facial pain syndromes, peripheral neuropathy, Parkinson or parkinsonism, epilepsy, schizophrenia and delusional diseases, multiple sclerosis, other psychiatric or behavioral diseases, and other neurological diseases. Musculoskeletal diseases: dorsopathies, inflammatory arthropathies, osteoarthritis and other degenerative joint diseases, osteoporosis, and other musculoskeletal and joint diseases.