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Researchers
find lack of sleep can double death
risk...But so can too much sleep
Researchers from the University of Warwick,
and University College London, have found
that lack of sleep can more than double the
risk of death from cardiovascular disease.
However they have also found that point
comes when too much sleep can also more than
double the risk of death.
In research to be presented today, Monday 24th
September 2007, to the British Sleep
Society, Professor Francesco Cappuccio from
the University of Warwick’s Warwick Medical
School will show the results of a study of
how sleep patterns affected the mortality of
10,308 civil servants in the “Whitehall II
study”.
Amongst other things the data they used
provided information on the mortality rates
and sleep patterns on the same group of
civil servants at two points in their life
(1985-8 and those still alive in 1992-3).
The researchers took into account other
possible factors such age, sex, marital
status, employment grade, smoking status,
physical activity, alcohol consumption,
self-rated health, body mass index, blood
pressure, cholesterol, other physical
illness etc.
Once they had adjusted for those factors
they were able to isolate the effect that
changes in sleep patterns over 5 years had
on mortality rates 11-17 years later.
Taking those who had not made any change in
their sleeping habits between 1985-8 and
1992-3 as their baseline (7 hours per night
being the figure normally recommended as an
appropriate period of sleep for an adult)
they were able to see what difference having
reduced the amount of sleep over time made
to mortality rates by 2004.
Those who had cut their sleeping from 7h to
5 hours or less faced a 1.7 fold increased
risk in mortality from all causes, and twice
the increased risk of death from a
cardiovascular problem in particular.
Professor Francesco Cappuccio from the
University of Warwick’s Warwick Medical
School will say to the British Sleep
Society:
“Fewer hours sleep and greater levels of
sleep disturbance have become widespread in
industrialised societies. This change,
largely the result of sleep curtailment to
create more time for leisure and shift-work,
has meant that reports of fatigue, tiredness
and excessive daytime sleepiness are more
common than a few decades ago. Sleep
represents the daily process of
physiological restitution and recovery, and
lack of sleep has far-reaching effects.”
Curiously the researchers also found that
too much sleep also increased mortality.
They found that those individuals who showed
an increase in sleep duration to 8 hours or
more a night were more than twice as likely
to die as those who had not changed their
habit, however, predominantly from
non-cardiovascular diseases.
Professor Francesco Cappuccio says:
“Short sleep has been shown to be a risk
factor for weight gain, hypertension and
Type 2 diabetes sometimes leading to
mortality but in contrast to the short
sleep-mortality association it appears that
no potential mechanisms by which long sleep
could be associated with increased mortality
have yet been investigated. Some candidate
causes for this include depression, low
socioeconomic status and cancer-related
fatigue.”
“In terms of prevention, our findings indicate that consistently sleeping
around 7 hours per night is optimal for
health and a sustained reduction may
predispose to ill-health.”
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