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Keeping Hypertension at Bay - Good Night's Sleep is the Way!

by Hannah Joy on July 26, 2022 at 4:45 PM
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Highlights:

Napping on a regular basis can put you at an increased risk of high blood pressure and stroke, reveals new research published in Hypertension, an American Heart Association journal.


Link between Frequent Naps and High Blood Pressure

Researchers in China examined whether frequent naps could be a potential causal risk factor for high blood pressure and/or stroke. This is the first study to use both observational analysis of participants over a long period of time and Mendelian randomization - a genetic risk validation - to investigate whether frequent napping was associated with high blood pressure and ischemic stroke.

‘People who nap frequently are at a 12% higher risk of developing hypertension and a 24% higher likelihood of having a stroke.’

"These results are especially interesting since millions of people might enjoy a regular or even daily nap," says E Wang, Ph.D., M.D., Professor and Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at Xiangya Hospital Central South University, and the study's corresponding author.

Researchers used information from UK Biobank, a large biomedical database and research resource containing anonymized genetic, lifestyle and health information from half a million UK participants. UK Biobank recruited more than 500,000 participants between the ages of 40 and 69 who lived in the United Kingdom between 2006 and 2010. They regularly provided blood, urine and saliva samples, as well as detailed information about their lifestyle.

The daytime napping frequency survey occurred 4 times from 2006 - 2019 in a small proportion of UK Biobank participants.

Wang's group excluded records of people who had already had a stroke or had high blood pressure before the start of the study. This left about 360,000 participants to analyze the association between napping and first-time reports of stroke or high blood pressure, with an average follow-up of about 11 years. Participants were divided into groups based on self-reported napping frequency: �never/rarely,' �"sometimes,' or �usually.'

The study found:

"This may be because, although taking a nap itself is not harmful, many people who take naps may do so because of poor sleep at night. Poor sleep at night is associated with poorer health, and naps are not enough to make up for that," said Michael A. Grandner, Ph.D., MTR, a sleep expert and co-author of the American Heart Association's new Life's Essential 8 cardiovascular health score, which added sleep duration in June 2022 as the 8th metric for measuring optimal heart and brain health. "This study echoes other findings that generally show that taking more naps seems to reflect an increased risk for problems with heart health and other issues." Grander is the director of the Sleep Health Research Program and the Behavioral Sleep Medicine Clinic and an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

The authors recommend further examination of the associations between a healthy sleep pattern, including daytime napping, and heart health.

The study has several important limitations to consider. Researchers only collected daytime napping frequency, not duration, so there is no information how or whether the length of nap affects blood pressure or stroke risks. Additionally, nap frequency was self-reported without any objective measurements, making estimates nonquantifiable.

The study's participants were mostly middle-aged and elderly with European ancestry, so the results may not be generalizable. Finally, researchers have not yet discovered the biological mechanism for the effect of daytime napping on blood pressure regulation or stroke.

Co-authors are Min-jing Yang, M.D.; Zhong Zhang, Ph.D., M.D.; Yi-jing Wang; M.D.; Jin-chen Li, Ph.D.; Qu-lian Guo, Ph.D., M.D.; Xiang Chen, Ph.D., M.D.

The National Key Research and Development Program of China financially supports this research.



Source: Eurekalert

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