Dorothy Bruck, Victoria University
Sleep is vital for good health but more of it may not always be better for everyone. Research recently published in the journal Neurology has found middle-aged and older people who sleep more than eight hours a day have an increased risk of stroke.
The findings are presented alongside a meta-analysis of 11 other studies from across seven countries involving over half a million people, which also finds longer sleeps can land you in an early grave.
Sleep and stroke
Poor sleep is a significant health concern because it’s known to affect emotional and cognitive well-being, quality of life, work-related productivity and safety. But insomnia itself is not associated with higher rates of premature death, according to a US study of more than 1.1 million people aged between 30 and 102 years. Rather, it’s sleep that is habitually either too short or too long that may be problematic.
The authors of the Neurology paper asked almost 10,000 people aged between 42 and 81 the average number of hours they slept daily and whether they generally slept well. Participants answered these questions twice in a four-year period and were monitored for nine-and-a-half years to see whether or not they had a stroke.
After adjusting for age and sex, researchers found long sleeps (more than eight hours) were associated with a significant (45%) increase in the risk of stroke. What’s more, being a good sleeper for those long hours in bed didn’t protect against this increased risk.