Losing Sleep May Increase
Your Risk of Stroke
People with
insomnia may be more likely to have a stroke than people who don't have trouble
sleeping, according to a new study.
Study participants who had insomnia had a 54 percent
higher risk of stroke over four years than the people who were not diagnosed
with the sleep disorder. They also found that, among people with insomnia,
stroke was eight times more common in people ages 18 to 34 than in those older
than 34.
"Our results add support to the prior findings on
the link between insomnia and a wide range of health risks," said study
author Ya-Wen Hsu, an assistant professor at Chia Nan University of Pharmacy
and Science in Taiwan.
"Though insomnia is the most common sleep
complaint, it should be perceived more as a symptom of another disease,"
Hsu told Live Science. People with insomnia should be treated early to prevent
other conditions, he said.
Although the number of deaths from stroke in the
United States declined by 22.8 percent between 2000 and 2010, about 795,000
people have a stroke each year, according to the American Heart Association. In
2010, stroke was responsible for one out of every 19 deaths in the U.S.
In the study, the researchers followed a group of
21,438 people with insomnia and 64,314 healthy people for four years. During
the study, 583 (2.7 percent) of those with insomnia were admitted to a hospital
for stroke, whereas 962 (1.5 percent) of those without insomnia were admitted
for stroke.
The link was strongest in people who'd had trouble
sleeping for up tosix months, according to the study.
The researchers said they don't know how or why
insomnia may be linked with an increased risk of stroke. However, they
speculated that the sleeping disorder may contribute to inflammation, increase
blood pressure and deregulate metabolism and, therefore, affect people's
cardiovascular health, Hsu said.
"We feel strongly that individuals with chronic
insomnia, particularly younger persons, see their physician to have stroke risk
factors assessed and, when indicated, treated appropriately," Hsu said in
a statement.
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