Sleep length can be linked with increased risk of fractures
Sleep
length
can be associated with an increased risk of fractures, a recent study has
suggested.
According
to the findings of the research, compared with women who slept seven to eight
hours each night, women who slept for 5 hours or 10 hours had about 25 per cent
increased odds of experiencing recurrent falls.
Short
sleep was associated with an increased risk of all fractures,
and upper limb, lower limb, and central body fractures, but not with an
increased risk of hip fractures. The findings of the study are published in the
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research.
The
analysis included 157,306 women enrolled in the Women's Health Initiative, with
an average follow-up time of 7.6 years for falls and 12.0 years for fractures.
The annualized rate of recurrent fall events was 10.6 percent among women
reporting 5 hours of sleep per night, 7.0 percent among women sleeping seven to
eight hours per night, and 11.8 percent among women sleeping 10 hours per
night.
"Falls
are an important public health
problem among older adults and lead to moderate to severe injuries.
Most fractures occur because of falls, and recent evidence shows that mortality
from falls in the US is increasing," said Dr Jane Cauley, lead author of
the study. Read
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