Insomnia and daytime napping in older adults.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Insomnia, daytime sleepiness, and napping are all highly prevalent among the elderly, reflecting changes in sleep architecture, sleep efficiency, sleep quality, and circadian sleep-wake cycles. Insomnia is sometimes associated with subjective daytime sleepiness, as well as other clinical and socioeconomic consequences. The daytime sleepiness will at times lead to napping. Although napping is viewed as a common age-related occurrence, little is known about its benefits or consequences. Factors reported to be contributors to daytime napping include sleep-maintenance difficulty and sleep fragmentation with consequent daytime sleepiness, nighttime use of long-acting sedating agents, daytime use of sedating medications, and dementia. However, a correlation between sleep disturbance and daytime napping has not been consistently observed. Whether napping is beneficial, neutral, or detrimental is an important issue, in light of conflicting findings regarding the impact of daytime napping on nighttime sleep and recent reports of an association between napping and adverse clinical outcomes, including increased mortality risk. Further research is needed to determine whether there is a cause-and-effect relationship between napping and insomnia, and between napping and adverse clinical outcomes, and to explore the clinical implications of improving insomnia and reducing daytime napping. Clinical evaluations of hypnotic agents should assess efficacy for both improving insomnia symptoms (particularly sleep-maintenance difficulty, in the case of elderly patients) and reducing daytime sleepiness that would lead to inadvertent napping.
منابع مشابه
Subjective and objective napping and sleep in older adults: are evening naps "bad" for nighttime sleep?
OBJECTIVES To compare objective and subjective measurements of napping and to examine the relationship between evening napping and nocturnal sleep in older adults. DESIGN For 12 days, participants wore actigraphs and completed sleep diaries. SETTING Community. PARTICIPANTS One hundred individuals who napped, aged 60 to 89 (including good and poor sleepers with typical age-related medical ...
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Insomnia, daytime sleepiness, and napping are all highly prevalent among the elderly, reflecting changes in sleep architecture, sleep efficiency, sleep quality, and circadian sleep-wake cycles. Insomnia is sometimes associated with subjective daytime sleepiness, as well as other clinical and socioeconomic consequences. The daytime sleepiness will at times lead to napping. Although napping is vi...
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733 DAYTIME SLEEP (NAPPING) AND NOCTURNAL AWAKENINGS ARE MORE COMMON IN OLDER THAN YOUNGER ADULTS.1-9 THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN daytime sleep, nighttime sleep, and nocturnal awakenings is not well defined. In studies with objective measures of daytime and nighttime sleep, the relationship of napping and sleep vary.10-12 Most studies have examined the effect of napping on subsequent night’s sleep,...
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OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to describe the prevalence and correlates of regular napping among older adults. METHODS The National Sleep Foundation's "2003 Sleep in America Poll," a 20-minute telephone interview that focused on the topic of "sleep and aging" (N = 1,506 adults 55-84 years of age). RESULTS Overall, 15% of respondents reported regular napping, ranging in prevalenc...
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Significant changes in sleep and circadian sleep-wake rhythms mark advancing age. Among these changes is the increasing prevalence of daytime and evening napping reported by older adults. The causes of such napping behavior and why it increases in prevalence with advancing age are unknown. No consistent relationships between complaints of nighttime sleep disruption and daytime napping have been...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
دوره 2 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006