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Amount of nightly sleep linked to stroke

BOSTON, June 12 (UPI) -- Routinely sleeping 6 hours or fewer a night significantly increases the risk of stroke symptoms among middle-age to older adults, U.S. researchers say.

Lead author Megan Ruiter of the University of Alabama at Birmingham said the study involved 5,666 normal-weight adults who were at low risk for obstructive sleep apnea. The study participants were tracked for as long as three years.

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Ruiter and colleagues recorded the subjects' first stroke symptoms, along with demographic information, stroke risk factors, depression symptoms and various health behaviors.

After adjusting for body-mass index, the researchers found a strong association for middle-age to older adults with daily sleep periods of fewer than 6 hours and a greater incidence of stroke symptoms -- even beyond other risk factors. However, the study found no association between short sleep periods and stroke symptoms among overweight and obese participants.

"In employed middle-aged to older adults, relatively free of major risk factors for stroke such as obesity and sleep-disordered breathing, short sleep duration may exact its own negative influence on stroke development," Ruiter said in a statement. "We speculate that short sleep duration is a precursor to other traditional stroke risk factors, and once these traditional stroke risk factors are present, then perhaps they become stronger risk factors than sleep duration alone."

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The findings were presented at Sleep, the 26th annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies in Boston.

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