Rest‐Activity Rhythms Are Associated With Prevalent Cardiovascular Disease, Hypertension, Obesity, and Central Adiposity in a Nationally Representative Sample of US Adults

Author:

Makarem Nour1ORCID,German Charles A.2ORCID,Zhang Zhanhao3ORCID,Diaz Keith M.45ORCID,Palta Priya46ORCID,Duncan Dustin T.1ORCID,Castro‐Diehl Cecilia7ORCID,Shechter Ari45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York NY

2. Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine University of Chicago Chicago IL

3. Department of Statistics Columbia University New York NY

4. Department of Medicine Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York NY

5. Center for Behavioral Cardiovascular Health Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York NY

6. Department of Neurology University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine Chapel Hill NC

7. Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA

Abstract

Background Rest‐activity rhythms (RARs), a measure of circadian rhythmicity in the free‐living setting, are related to mortality risk, but evidence is limited on associations with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and its risk factors. Methods and Results Participants included 4521 adults from the 2013 to 2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey physical activity monitoring examination. Wrist‐worn ActiGraph GT3X+ data were used to estimate RARs. Multivariable logistic models evaluated associations of RARs with prevalent CVD, hypertension, obesity, and central adiposity. Participants (mean age, 49 years) in the highest versus lowest tertile of relative amplitude (greater circadian rhythmicity) had 39% to 62% lower odds of prevalent CVD, hypertension, obesity, and central adiposity. A more active wake period was associated with 19% to 72% lower CVD, hypertension, obesity, and central adiposity odds. Higher interdaily stability (regular sleep‐wake and rest‐activity patterns) was related to 52% and 23% lower CVD and obesity odds, respectively. In contrast, participants in the highest versus lowest tertile of intradaily variability (fragmented RAR and inefficient sleep) had >3‐fold and 24% higher CVD and obesity odds, respectively. A later and less restful sleep period was associated with 36% to 2‐fold higher CVD, hypertension, obesity, and central adiposity odds. A statistically significant linear trend was observed for all associations ( P ‐trend<0.05). Conclusions A robust, stable, and less fragmented RAR, an active wake period, and an earlier and more restful sleep period are associated with lower prevalent CVD, hypertension, obesity, and central adiposity, with evidence of a dose‐response relationship. The magnitude, timing, and regularity of sleep‐wake and rest‐activity patterns may be important targets for reducing cardiovascular risk.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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