| Literature DB >> 33995242 |
Xiantao Li1, Ding Ding2, Qianhua Zhao2, Wanqing Wu2, Zhenxu Xiao2, Jianfeng Luo3, Kristine Yaffe4,5,6, Yue Leng5,6.
Abstract
Background: Growing evidence has suggested a link between poor sleep quality and increased risk of dementia. However, little is known about the association between sleep timing, an important behavior marker of circadian rhythms, and dementia risk in older adults, and whether this is independent of sleep duration or quality.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; epidemiological analysis; longitudinal; low- and lower-middle-income countries; sleep
Year: 2021 PMID: 33995242 PMCID: PMC8116668 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.629507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Baseline characteristics of the 584 participants by bedtime.
| 238 (22.8%) | 675 (64.5%) | 133 (12.7%) | ||
| Age | 75.6 (SD 8.0) | 70.7 (SD 7.9) | 68.8 (SD 7.5) | 0.71 |
| Female | 139 (58.7%) | 392 (58.3) | 64 (48.1%) | 0.08 |
| Income≥1200RMB/month | 231 (97.0%) | 663 (98.2%) | 128 (96.1%) | 0.380 |
| College education or more | 32 (13.5%) | 234 (34.8%) | 53 (39.9%) | |
| BMI | 25.5 (SD 3.8) | 24.9 (SD 3.3) | 24.7 (3.6) | 0.186 |
| Current smoking | 14 (5.9%) | 54 (8.1%) | 26 (19.6%) | |
| Alcohol drinking | 23 (9.8%) | 44 (6.6%) | 16 (12.0%) | |
| Physical activity | 83 (35.6%) | 202 (30.4%) | 54 (40.9%) | |
| Depression symptoms | 31 (12.9%) | 84 (12.4%) | 17 (12.6%) | 0.990 |
| Hypertension | 161 (67.9%) | 368 (54.7%) | 68 (51.1%) | |
| Heart disease | 44 (18.6%) | 97 (14.5%) | 17 (12.9%) | 0.23 |
| Diabetes | 49 (20.7%) | 113 (16.8%) | 12 (9.0%) | |
| APOE e4 | 45 (21.6%) | 89 (14.4%) | 19 (14.6%) | |
| Sleep duration | 6.9 (SD 1.3) | 6.9 (SD 1.2) | 6.7 (SD 1.1) | 0.245 |
| Sleep efficiency | 85.0 (SD 13.6) | 83.1 (SD 14.4) | 85.7 (SD 12.6) | 0.171 |
| PSQI score | 4.48 (SD 3.07) | 4.87 (SD 3.45) | 4.91 (SD 3.14) | 0.538 |
| MMSE | 27.6 (SD 2.9) | 28.1 (SD 2.2) | 28.6 (SD 2.0) | |
| MMSE at follow-up | 23.8 (SD 7.1) | 27.3 (SD 2.9) | 27.4 (SD 3.8) | |
| Incident of dementia | 26 (24.5%) | 20 (5.0%) | 1 (1.2%) |
Among the 584 participants who completed the follow-up interview. Bold values indicate statistically significant.
Figure 1Cumulative incident plots of dementia in participants with different bedtime (A) and rise time (B) during the follow-up.
Hazard ratio (95%CI) of dementia by bedtime and rise time.
| Incident of dementia, | 26 (24.5%) | 20 (5.0%) | 1 (1.2%) |
| Unadjusted HR | 5.31 (2.96–9.51) | 1 | 0.24 (0.03–1.80) |
| HR adjusted in model 1 | 2.72 (1.50–4.96) | 1 | 0.24 (0.03–1.81) |
| HR adjusted in model 2 | 2.16 (1.06–4.40) | 1 | 0.15 (0.02–1.29) |
| HR adjusted in model 3 | 2.00 (0.94–4.29) | 1 | 0.12 (0.01–1.05) |
| Incident of dementia, | 26 (9.1%) | 21 (7.6%) | 0 |
| Unadjusted HR | 1.25 (0.71–2.22) | 1 | - |
| HR adjusted in model 1 | 1.17 (0.65–2.09) | 1 | - |
| HR adjusted in model 2 | 1.49 (0.72–3.10) | 1 | - |
| HR adjusted in model 3 | 2.10 (0.93-4.74) | 1 | - |
Model 1: adjusted for age, sex, education.
Model 2: adjusted for age, sex, education, income, body mass index (BMI), depressive symptoms, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, comorbidities, APOE4 genotype, and baseline MMSE.
Model 3: adjusted for age, sex, education, income, body mass index (BMI), depressive symptoms, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, comorbidities, APOE4 genotype, baseline MMSE, sleep duration, and efficiency.