WASHINGTON: Habitually
sleeping less than six hours a night significantly increases the risk of
stroke symptoms among middle-age to older adults, according to a
research presented at the SLEEP 2012 conference.
The study, which followed
about 5,600 people for about three years, concluded that poor sleep can
undermine all the other things we do, China's Xinhua news agency said.
The participants had no
history of stroke, transient ischemic attack, stroke symptoms or high
risk for obstructive sleep apnea at the start of the study.
Researchers from the
University of Alabama at Birmingham recorded the first stroke symptoms,
along with demographic information, stroke risk factors, depression
symptoms and various health behaviors.
After adjusting for body-mass
index, they found a strong association with daily sleep periods of less
than six hours and a greater incidence of stroke symptoms for
middle-age to older adults, even beyond other risk factors.
"We speculate that short
sleep duration is a precursor to other traditional stroke risk factors,
and once these traditional stroke risk factors are present, then perhaps
they become stronger risk factors than sleep duration alone," lead
author Megan Ruiter said in a statement.
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