Background
It is not clear whether cognitive decline progresses more quickly in long sleepers than in short sleepers or than in participants with usual sleep duration. We assessed cognitive decline as a
function o
f sel
f-reported sleep duration in a prospective population-based cohort (NEDICES).
Methods
Participants were evaluated at baseline and 3 years later. Baseline demographic variables were recorded and participants indicated their daily sleep usual duration as the sum of nighttime sleep and daytime napping. The average daily total usual sleep duration was grouped into three categories: 鈮?聽h (short sleepers), 6-8聽h (reference category), and 鈮?聽h (long sleepers). At baseline and at follow-up, a 37-item version of the Mini-Mental State Examination (37-MMSE) was administered.
Results
The final sample, 2715 participants (72.9聽卤聽6.1 years), comprised 298 (11%) short sleepers, 1086 (40%) long sleepers, and 1331 (49%) in the reference group (6-8聽h). During the three year follow-up period, the 37-MMSE declined by 0.5聽卤聽4.0 points in short sleepers, 0.6聽卤聽4.3 points in long sleepers, and 0.2聽卤聽3.8 points in the reference group (p聽=聽0.08). The difference between short sleepers and the reference group was not significant (p聽=聽0.142); however, the difference between long sleepers and the reference group was significant (p聽=聽0.040). In analyses adjusted for baseline age and other potential confounders, this difference remained robust.
Conclusions
In this study, cognitive test scores among long sleepers declined more rapidly than observed in a reference group. Additional studies are needed to confirm these results.