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Abstract
Long and short sleep have been associated with increased mortality. We assessed mortality
and 3 aspects of sleep behavior in a large cohort with 22-year follow-up.
Prospective, population-based cohort study.
21,268 twins aged > or =18 years responding to questionnaires administered to the
Finnish Twin Cohort in 1975 (response rate 89%), and 1981 (84%).
N/A.
Subjects were categorized as short (<7 h), average, or long (>8 h) sleepers; sleeping
well, fairly well, or fairly poorly/poorly; no, infrequent, or frequent users of hypnotics
and/or tranquilizers. Cox proportional hazard models were used to obtain hazard ratios
(HR) for mortality during 1982-2003 by sleep variable categories and their combinations.
Adjustments were done for 10 sociodemographic and lifestyle covariates known to affect
risk of death.
Significantly increased risk of mortality was observed both for short sleep in men
(+26%) and in women (+21%), and for long sleep (+24% and +17%), respectively, and
also frequent use of hypnotics/tranquilizers (+31% in men and +39% in women). Snoring
as a covariate did not change the results. The effect of sleep on mortality varied
between age groups, with strongest effects in young men. Between 1975 and 1981, sleep
length and sleep quality changed in one-third of subjects. In men there was a significant
increase for stable short (1.34) and stable long (1.29) sleep for natural deaths,
and for external causes in stable short sleepers (1.62).
Our results show complicated associations between sleep and mortality, with increased
risk in short and long sleep.