Sleep efficiency and the metabolic risk score in very active older women and men.

Kenneth M Madden, Boris Feldman, Jocelyn Chase
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Abstract

Study objectives: Sleep disruption is a risk factor for obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease in older adults. How physical activity (PA) interacts with the negative cardiometabolic effects of poor sleep is not known. We objectively measured sleep efficiency (SE) in very active older adults and examined the association between SE and a continuous Metabolic Syndrome Risk Score (cMSy).

Methods: Very active older adults (age ≥65 years) from a Master's Ski Team (Whistler, Canada) were recruited. Each participants wore an activity monitor (SenseWear Pro) continuously for 7 days to provide measures of both daily energy expenditure (metabolic equivalents, METs) and SE. All components of the metabolic syndrome were measured and a principal component analysis was used to compute a continuous metabolic risk score (cMSy, sum of eigenvalues ≥1.0).

Results: A total of 54 participants (mean age 71.4 years, SD 4.4 years, and 24 men and 30 women) were recruited and had very high PA levels (>2.5 h per day of exercise). Initially, there was no significant association between SE and cMSy (p = 0.222). When stratified by biological sex, only men showed a significant negative association between SE and cMSy (Standardized β = -0.364 ± 0.159, p = 0.032).

Conclusions: Only older men show a significant negative association between poor SE and increased cardiometabolic risk, despite high levels of PA.

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非常活跃的老年女性和男性的睡眠效率和代谢风险评分。
研究目的:睡眠中断是老年人肥胖、糖尿病和心血管疾病的危险因素。体育活动(PA)如何与睡眠不足的负面心脏代谢影响相互作用尚不清楚。我们客观地测量了非常活跃的老年人的睡眠效率(SE),并检查了SE与持续代谢综合征风险评分(cMSy)之间的关系。每位参与者连续佩戴活动监测仪(SenseWear Pro)7天,以提供每日能量消耗(代谢当量,METs)和SE的测量值。测量代谢综合征的所有成分,并使用主成分分析计算连续代谢风险评分(cMSy,特征值之和≥1.0)。结果:共招募了54名参与者(平均年龄71.4岁,SD 4.4岁,24名男性和30名女性),他们的PA水平非常高(每天运动>2.5小时)。最初,SE和cMSy之间没有显著关联(p=0.222)。当按生理性别分层时,只有男性表现出SE和cMSy之间的显著负相关(标准化β=-0.364±0.159,p=0.032)。结论:尽管PA水平较高,但只有老年男性表现出较差的SE和心脏代谢风险增加之间的显着负相关。
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A life of research on everyday sleep(iness). How openness and inquisitiveness led to a career as a sleep researcher and a broad contribution to sleep science. The lasting legacy of Charles Fisher (1908-1988), pioneering sleep laboratory scientist and sleep medicine psychiatrist. How did I come to sleep research and stay there? Looking beyond sleep duration in understanding obesity risk in adolescents: the role of circadian timing and misalignment on adolescent dietary outcomes, physical activity, and body mass index.
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