Journal of sleep research | 2021

Association between sleep characteristics, ideal cardiovascular health, and systemic inflammation, NHANES 2017-2018.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


There is conflicting evidence regarding the associations between sleep deprivation and inflammatory biomarkers indicative of cardiovascular disease risk, such as high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP). The association between sleep habits and hsCRP was quantified in a nationally representative sample of adults in the United States and mediation by ideal cardiovascular health metrics was explored. A cross-sectional analysis of cardiovascular disease-free participants aged 20-79\xa0years from the 2017-2018\xa0National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey was conducted. The primary exposures were self-reported sleep duration, sleep debt (difference between the average weekday and weekend sleep duration), and ideal cardiovascular health (11-14 points). The primary outcome was hsCRP (high-risk\xa0≥\xa03.0\xa0mg/L). Multivariable robust Poisson models were used to estimate prevalence ratios after multiple imputation. A subgroup analysis of shift workers was also conducted. Of 4027 participants included (mean age 46\xa0years; 52% female; 41% shift workers), the prevalence of sleeping <6\xa0h on weekdays was 9%, with 40% sleeping ≥9\xa0h on weekends. One-quarter had a high (≥2\xa0h) sleep debt, 82% had poor cardiovascular health, and 34% had high-risk hsCRP. There were no significant associations between weekday sleep duration or sleep debt with high-risk hsCRP, even among shift workers. Mediation analysis was not conducted. Ideal cardiovascular health was associated with a lower prevalence of high-risk hsCRP (prevalence ratios, 0.60, 95% CI, 0.48-0.75). The lack of significant associations suggests a complex interrelationship of hsCRP with factors beyond sleep duration. Examination of populations at highest risk of chronic sleep deprivation could help to elucidate the association with systemic inflammation-related outcomes.

Volume None
Pages \n e13497\n
DOI 10.1111/jsr.13497
Language English
Journal Journal of sleep research

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