1. Objectively Measured Sleep Duration and Health-Related Quality of Life in Older Adults with Metabolic Syndrome: A One-Year Longitudinal Analysis of the PREDIMED-Plus Cohort.
- Author
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Marcos-Delgado A, Martín-Sánchez V, Martínez-González MÁ, Corella D, Salas-Salvadó J, Schröder H, Martínez A, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Wärnberg J, Vioque J, Romaguera D, López-Miranda J, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Santos-Lozano JM, Álvarez-Pérez J, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Cano-Ibáñez N, Amezcua-Prieto C, Hernández-Segura N, Tur JA, Pintó X, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía-Martín P, Vidal J, Vázquez C, Daimiel L, Ros E, Toledo E, Garcidueñas-Fimbres TE, Viaplana J, Asensio EM, Zomeño MD, Garcia-Rios A, Oncina-Cánovas A, Barón-López FJ, Pérez-Farinos N, Sayon-Orea C, Galmés-Panadés AM, Casas R, Tojal-Sierra L, Gómez-Pérez AM, Buil-Corsiales P, García-Gavilán JF, Ortega-Azorín C, Castañer O, Peña-Orihuela PJ, González-Palacios S, Babio N, Fitó M, and Nieto J
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Middle Aged, Male, Female, Longitudinal Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Spain epidemiology, Time Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Accelerometry, Healthy Lifestyle, Sleep Duration, Quality of Life, Sleep physiology, Metabolic Syndrome psychology, Metabolic Syndrome epidemiology
- Abstract
The aim of our cross-sectional and longitudinal study is to assess the relationship between daytime and night-time sleep duration and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adults with metabolic syndrome after a 1-year healthy lifestyle intervention. Analysis of the data from 2119 Spanish adults aged 55-75 years from the PREDIMED-Plus study was performed. Sleep duration was assessed using a wrist-worn accelerometer. HRQoL was measured using the SF-36 questionnaire. Linear regression models adjusted for socioeconomic and lifestyle factors and morbidity were developed. In cross-sectional analyses, participants with extreme night-time sleep duration categories showed lower physical component summary scores in Models 1 and 2 [β-coefficient (95% confidence interval) <6 h vs. 7-9 h: -2, 3 (-3.8 to -0.8); p = 0.002. >9 h vs. 7-9 h: -1.1 (-2.0 to -0.3); p = 0.01]. Participants who sleep less than 7 h a night and take a nap are associated with higher mental component summary scores [β-coefficient (95% confidence interval) 6.3 (1.3 to 11.3); p = 0.01]. No differences between night-time sleep categories and 12-month changes in HRQoL were observed. In conclusion, in cross-sectional analyses, extremes in nocturnal sleep duration are related to lower physical component summary scores and napping is associated with higher mental component summary scores in older adults who sleep less than 7 h a night.
- Published
- 2024
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