Sleep and Risk for Metabolic Syndrome, Hypertension, Diabetes and Obesity Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults
Older adults often face a variety of health problems that are found less frequently in younger populations. Metabolic syndrome and other related diseases are common due to a variety of age and lifestyle factors. Sleep, often operationalized only as duration, quality, or apnea diagnosis, is associate...
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Published in | International journal of exercise science Vol. 15; no. 3; pp. 88 - 102 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Berkeley Electronic Press
01.12.2021
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Older adults often face a variety of health problems that are found less frequently in younger populations. Metabolic syndrome and other related diseases are common due to a variety of age and lifestyle factors. Sleep, often operationalized only as duration, quality, or apnea diagnosis, is associated with worse health outcomes across the lifespan. However, sleep is multi-faceted and may require a collection of measures in order to reflect this. This study examined a suite of self-reported sleep habits (risk for sleep apnea, night time duration, nap duration, quality, timing, and consistency of duration and timing) and physiological data in a sample of 144 older adults. Sleep-related variables as a group predicted risk for metabolic syndrome, hypertension, and diabetes but was not a clear predictor of obesity. Of the individual measures, risk for apnea and consistency of sleep duration throughout the week predicted risk for metabolic syndrome (apnea
b
= .64,
p
< .05; duration inconsistencies
b
= .22,
p
< .05). The findings of the study suggest that greater consistency in sleep schedules may benefit the health of older adult populations’ risk for these disorders. |
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Bibliography: | Denotes graduate student author Denotes professional author |
ISSN: | 1939-795X |