Lack of sleep
linked to increased risk of high blood pressure
Newswise — If you’re middle age and
sleep five or less hours a night, you may be increasing your risk of
developing high blood pressure, according to a study released by
Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and the
College of Physicians and Surgeons, and reported in Hypertension:
Journal of the American Heart Association.
“Sleep allows the heart to slow
down and blood pressure to drop for a significant part of the day,”
said James E. Gangwisch, PhD, lead author of the study and
post-doctoral fellow in the psychiatric epidemiology training (PET)
program at the Mailman School. “However, people who sleep for only
short durations raise their average 24-hour blood pressure and heart
rate. This may set up the cardiovascular system to operate at an
elevated pressure.”
Dr. Gangwisch said that 24 percent
of people ages 32 to 59 who slept for five or fewer hours a night
developed hypertension versus 12 percent of those who got seven or
eight hours of sleep. Subjects who slept five or fewer hours per
night continued to be significantly more likely to be diagnosed with
hypertension after controlling for factors such as obesity,
diabetes, physical activity, salt and alcohol consumption, smoking,
depression, age, education, gender, and ethnicity.
The researchers conducted a
longitudinal analysis of data from the Epidemiologic Follow-up
Studies of the first National Health and Nutrition Examination Study
(NHANES I). The analysis is based on NHANES I data from 4,810 people
ages 32 to 86 who did not have high blood pressure at baseline. The
1982-84 follow-up survey asked participants how many hours they
slept at night. During eight to 10 years of follow-up, 647 of the
4,810 participants were diagnosed with hypertension.
Compared to people who slept seven
or eight hours a night, people who slept five or fewer hours a night
also exercised less and were more likely to have a higher body mass
index. (BMI is a measurement used to assess body fatness). They were
also more likely to have diabetes and depression, and to report
daytime sleepiness.
“We had hypothesized that both BMI
and a history of diabetes would mediate the relationship between
sleep and blood pressure, and the results were consistent with
this,” Dr. Gangwisch said.
Sleep deprivation has been shown
previously to increase appetite and compromise insulin sensitivity.
Short sleep duration was linked to
a new diagnosis of high blood pressure among middle-aged
participants, but the association was not observed among people age
60 or older, he said. Dr. Gangwisch said the differences between the
younger and older subjects might be explained by the fact that
advanced age is associated with difficulties falling and staying
asleep. Another factor could be that subjects suffering from
hypertension, diabetes, and obesity would be less likely to survive
into their later years.
Among study limitations,
researchers found that high blood pressure often goes undetected. An
analysis of NHANES III data showed that over 30 percent of people
who had high blood pressure didn’t know they had it.
Since the study is based on
observational data, Dr. Gangwisch said more research is needed to
confirm the association between short sleep duration and high blood
pressure. “We need to investigate the biological mechanisms and, if
confirmed, design interventions that will help people modify sleep
behavior,” he said.
Dr. Gangwisch said the study’s
main message is clear: “A good night’s sleep is very important for
good health.”
Co-authors of the study include
Andrew G. Rundle, DrPH, assistant professor of Epidemiology at the
Mailman School of Public Health; and Columbia University Medical
Center’s Steven B. Heymsfield, MD; Bernadette Boden-Albala, DrPH;
Ruud M. Buijs, PhD; Felix Kreier, PhD; Thomas G. Pickering, MD,
DPhil; Gary K. Zammit, PhD; and Dolores Malaspina, MD.
Support for the study was provided
by a National Research Service Award by the National Institute of
Mental Health.
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