Objective sleep and cardiometabolic biomarkers: results from the community of mine study.

Steven Zamora, Kelsie M Full, Erica Ambeba, Kimberly Savin, Katie Crist, Loki Natarajan, Dorothy D Sears, Sarah Alismail, Noémie Letellier, Tarik Benmarhnia, Marta M Jankowska
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Abstract

Study objectives: Examining multiple dimensions of sleep health may better capture associations between sleep and health risks, including cardiometabolic disease (CMD). Hispanics have elevated risk for inadequate sleep and CMD biomarkers. Few studies have explored whether associations between sleep and CMD differ by Hispanic ethnicity.

Methods: Leveraging data from the Community of Mine (CoM) study, a cross-sectional investigation of 602 ethnically diverse participants, we derived accelerometer-measured sleep duration and efficiency, and self-reported sleep quality. Accelerometer-measured sleep exposures were analyzed both as continuous and categorical variables. Multivariate and quantile regression models were used to assess associations between sleep and CMD biomarkers (insulin resistance, systolic blood pressure, and low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol), controlling for age, sex, ethnicity, education, smoking status, and body mass index. We examined the potential effect modification of Hispanic ethnicity.

Results: We observed mixed results based on CMD biomarkers and sleep exposure. Increased sleep duration was significantly related to low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in adjusted models (estimate = 0.06; 95% CI: 0.02, 0.11). Poor sleep efficiency was associated with greater insulin resistance in the adjusted quantile (estimate = 0.20; 95% CI: 0.04, 0.36) model at the 90th percentile. Self-reported sleep quality was not associated with CMD outcomes. There was no evidence of effect modification by Hispanic ethnicity.

Conclusions: In this cohort, sleep health measures were found to have mixed and at times opposing effects on CMD outcomes. These effects did not demonstrate an interaction with Hispanic ethnicity.

客观睡眠和心脏代谢生物标志物:矿区研究的结果。
研究目的:对睡眠健康的多个维度进行研究,可以更好地捕捉睡眠与健康风险(包括心血管代谢疾病)之间的关联。拉美裔人睡眠不足和心血管疾病生物标志物的风险较高。很少有研究探讨睡眠与 CMD 之间的关联是否因西班牙裔种族而异:利用 "我的社区"(CoM)研究(一项对 602 名不同种族参与者进行的横断面调查)的数据,我们得出了加速计测量的睡眠时间和效率,以及自我报告的睡眠质量。加速度计测量的睡眠暴露数据既可以作为连续变量,也可以作为分类变量进行分析。在控制年龄、性别、种族、教育程度、吸烟状况和体重指数的情况下,我们使用多变量和定量回归模型来评估睡眠与 CMD 生物标志物(胰岛素抵抗、收缩压和低密度脂蛋白胆固醇)之间的关系。我们还研究了西班牙裔的潜在影响:根据 CMD 生物标志物和睡眠暴露,我们观察到了不同的结果。在调整模型中,睡眠时间的延长与低密度脂蛋白胆固醇有明显关系(估计值=0.06;95% CI:0.02,0.11)。在第 90 百分位数的调整定量模型中,睡眠效率差与胰岛素抵抗有关(估计值 = 0.20;95% CI:0.04,0.36)。自我报告的睡眠质量与CMD结果无关。没有证据表明西班牙裔的影响会被修正:在该队列中,睡眠健康指标对慢性阻塞性肺病结果的影响不一,有时甚至是相反的。这些影响没有显示出与西班牙裔的交互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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