Sleep duration, daytime napping and the risk of incident metabolic syndrome vary by age and sex: findings from the China health and retirement longitudinal study

Feb 27, 2025BMC public health

How Sleep Length and Daytime Naps Relate to New Metabolic Syndrome Risk Differ by Age and Sex

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Abstract

During a median follow-up period of 4 years, 22.0% of participants developed new-onset (MetS).

  • Longer daytime napping (> 30 min/day) is significantly associated with the occurrence of MetS.
  • The odds of developing MetS increase with longer napping, with an odds ratio of 1.247.
  • This association remains significant even after adjusting for various covariates.
  • Elderly females show a stronger association, with an odds ratio of 1.946 for longer daytime napping and MetS.
  • Sleep duration does not show a significant association with MetS in this population.

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Key numbers

616 of 2803
New-onset incidence
Number of participants who developed during follow-up
1.247
Increased risk of
Odds ratio for in participants with > 30 min/day napping vs. non-nappers
1.946
Elderly female risk of
Odds ratio for in elderly females with longer napping

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