In a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults, those who
slept seven hours a night had the lowest heart risk on average,
calculated as 3.7 years of aging beyond their chronological age.
That compared to 4.5 excess heart age years for those who slept six
or eight hours and 5.1 excess years for those who got five or fewer
hours of sleep nightly.
"Prolonged periods of insufficient sleep have negative effects on
multiple body systems including the cardiovascular system," lead
study author Quanhe Yang told Reuters Health in an email.
"Studies have shown significant relationships between sleep duration
and heart disease risk factors such as high blood pressure, smoking,
high blood cholesterol, diabetes, and obesity," said Yang, a senior
scientist with the Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch, Division
for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention of the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
Heart age is defined as the predicted age of a person's vascular
system based on their cardiovascular risk profile and was introduced
by the Framingham Heart Study in 2008, Yang noted.
"The difference between a person's estimated heart age and his or
her chronological age is 'excess heart age.' Higher excess heart age
indicates a higher risk of developing heart disease," he said.
For example, if a 40-year-old man has a heart age of 44 years based
on his cardiovascular risk profile - the personal risk of having a
heart disease - then his excess heart age is 4 years.
"In effect, his heart is 4 years older than it should be, for a
typical man his age. The concept of heart age helps to simplify risk
communication."
The CDC's goal with this study was to find a way to effectively
communicate the impact of insufficient sleep on heart health, Yang
noted. "Excess heart age (EHA) represents a simplified way to
express a person's risk for having a heart disease."
Yang and colleagues analyzed data from the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Surveys in 2007 - 2014 on 12,755 participants
between the ages of 30 and 74 years with no history of heart disease
or stroke.
Based on self-reported average weeknight sleep times, the study team
divided people into five groups. About 13 percent averaged five or
fewer hours of sleep each night, 24 percent slept six hours, 31
percent slept seven hours, 26 percent slept eight hours and about 5
percent slept nine or more hours per night.
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The researchers calculated the participants' excess heart age by
factoring in age, sex, blood pressure, whether they were being
treated for hypertension, smoking history, diabetes and cholesterol
to come up with an overall cardiovascular risk profile. Then they
translated that risk profile into excess heart age years, according
to the report in the journal Sleep Health.
"Using excess heart age associated with sleep duration might
simplify communication of heart disease risk," Yang said. This could
motivate more people, especially younger people, among whom the risk
for cardiovascular disease is increasing, to be aware of the
importance of sleeping the recommended seven hours per night.
"Previously, studies have demonstrated that sleep duration in adults
is associated with cardiovascular risk factors, cardiovascular
events, and all-cause mortality," said Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a
cardiologist with the Devid Geffen School of Medicine at the
University of California, Los Angeles, who was not involved in the
study.
"Sleep duration that is either too short or too long is associated
with greater risk, with most studies suggesting that the lowest risk
occurs with 7 hours per day of sleep duration," he said in an email.
Shorter sleep duration may contribute to cardiovascular event risk
through effects on metabolic and endocrine functions, inflammation,
vascular damage, along with circadian misalignment, Fonarow added.
There are "heart age" calculators available online, he noted,
including one on the website of New York City's health department
(here: https://on.nyc.gov/2lkY9XB ).
"Further studies should evaluate whether extending sleep duration in
adults sleeping less than 7 hours per night can improve
cardiovascular health," Fonarow said.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2vx2ufS Sleep Health, online July 30, 2018.
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