Sleep-wake behaviors associated with cognitive performance in middle-aged participants of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Sleep Health Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.sleh.2024.02.002
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Abstract

Objectives

Many sleep-wake behaviors have been associated with cognition. We examined a panel of sleep-wake/activity characteristics to determine which are most robustly related to having low cognitive performance in midlife. Secondarily, we evaluate the predictive utility of sleep-wake measures to screen for low cognitive performance.

Methods

The outcome was low cognitive performance defined as being >1 standard deviation below average age/sex/education internally normalized composite cognitive performance levels assessed in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos. Analyses included 1006 individuals who had sufficient sleep-wake measurements about 2 years later (mean age = 54.9, standard deviation = 5.1; 68.82% female). We evaluated associations of 31 sleep-wake variables with low cognitive performance using separate logistic regressions.

Results

In individual models, the strongest sleep-wake correlates of low cognitive performance were measures of weaker and unstable 24-hour rhythms; greater 24-hour fragmentation; longer time-in-bed; and lower rhythm amplitude. One standard deviation worse on these sleep-wake factors was associated with ∼20%-30% greater odds of having low cognitive performance. In an internally cross-validated prediction model, the independent correlates of low cognitive performance were: lower Sleep Regularity Index scores; lower pseudo-F statistics (modellability of 24-hour rhythms); lower activity rhythm amplitude; and greater time in bed. Area under the curve was low/moderate (64%) indicating poor predictive utility.

Conclusion

The strongest sleep-wake behavioral correlates of low cognitive performance were measures of longer time-in-bed and irregular/weak rhythms. These sleep-wake assessments were not useful to identify previous low cognitive performance. Given their potential modifiability, experimental trials could test if targeting midlife time-in-bed and/or irregular rhythms influences cognition.

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拉美裔社区健康研究》/《拉美裔研究》中年参与者的睡眠-觉醒行为与认知能力的关系。
目标许多睡眠-觉醒行为都与认知能力有关。我们研究了一系列睡眠-觉醒/活动特征,以确定哪些特征与中年认知能力低下的关系最为密切。其次,我们还评估了睡眠-觉醒测量对筛查认知能力低下的预测效用:结果:低认知能力的定义是低于西班牙裔社区健康研究/拉丁裔研究中评估的平均年龄/性别/教育程度内部标准化复合认知能力水平>1个标准差。分析对象包括约 2 年后进行了充分睡眠-觉醒测量的 1006 人(平均年龄=54.9,标准差=5.1;68.82% 为女性)。我们使用单独的逻辑回归评估了 31 个睡眠-觉醒变量与认知能力低下之间的关系:在单个模型中,与认知能力低下密切相关的睡眠-觉醒变量包括:24 小时节律较弱且不稳定;24 小时片段化程度较高;卧床时间较长;节律振幅较低。这些睡眠-觉醒因素每差一个标准差,认知能力低下的几率就会增加20%-30%。在一个内部交叉验证的预测模型中,认知能力低下的独立相关因素是:睡眠规律性指数得分较低;伪F统计量(24小时节律的可模拟性)较低;活动节律振幅较低;卧床时间较长。曲线下面积较低/中等(64%),表明预测效用较差:结论:与认知能力低下密切相关的睡眠-觉醒行为是较长的卧床时间和不规则/较弱的节律。这些睡眠-觉醒评估对于确定之前的认知能力低下并无用处。鉴于其潜在的可修改性,实验性试验可以测试针对中年睡眠时间和/或不规则节律是否会影响认知能力。
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来源期刊
Sleep Health
Sleep Health CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
9.80%
发文量
114
审稿时长
54 days
期刊介绍: Sleep Health Journal of the National Sleep Foundation is a multidisciplinary journal that explores sleep''s role in population health and elucidates the social science perspective on sleep and health. Aligned with the National Sleep Foundation''s global authoritative, evidence-based voice for sleep health, the journal serves as the foremost publication for manuscripts that advance the sleep health of all members of society.The scope of the journal extends across diverse sleep-related fields, including anthropology, education, health services research, human development, international health, law, mental health, nursing, nutrition, psychology, public health, public policy, fatigue management, transportation, social work, and sociology. The journal welcomes original research articles, review articles, brief reports, special articles, letters to the editor, editorials, and commentaries.
期刊最新文献
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