Self-Reported Sleep Duration Is a Useful Tool to Predict Sarcopenia in Chilean Older Adults: Evidence from the ALEXANDROS Longitudinal Study

Author:

Gutiérrez Myriam123,Márquez Carlos124ORCID,Lera Lydia15,Peirano Patricio6ORCID,Salech Felipe7,Albala Cecilia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Aging, Age and Quality of Life Nucleus, Public Nutrition Unit, Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology (INTA), University of Chile, Santiago 7830490, Chile

2. Healthy Brain Unit, Neurology and Neurosurgery Northern Department, University of Chile Clinical Hospital, Santiago 8380456, Chile

3. Núcleo Magíster en Salud de la Mujer (MSM), Facultad de Medicina y Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad Mayor, Santiago 7500994, Chile

4. Internal Medicine Department, Universidad de La Frontera, Temuco 4811230, Chile

5. Latin Division, Keiser University Campus, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33409, USA

6. Sleep and Functional Neurobiology Laboratory, Human Nutrition Unit, Institute of Nutrition and Food Technology (INTA), University of Chile, Santiago 7830490, Chile

7. Falls and Fracture Clinic, Geriatrics Section, Advanced Clinical Research Center (CICA), University of Chile Clinical Hospital, Santiago 8380456, Chile

Abstract

Age-related sleep disorders share common pathways with sarcopenia. Prospective data from Latin American populations are scarce, and the association between sleep disorders and sarcopenia in Chileans remains unknown. Thus, we aimed to study the longitudinal association between sleep disorders and sarcopenia in a cohort study of 1116 community-dwelling Chilean older people ≥60 years old from the ALEXANDROS cohorts. After the exclusion criteria, 318 subjects were followed. Sociodemographic data, self-reported chronic diseases, sedentarism, sleep characteristics, anthropometric measurements, handgrip strength, and muscle performance were assessed. Results indicated that at baseline, the prevalence of sarcopenia was 24.10% without gender differences, and the prevalence of self-reported sleep problems was 23.3%, higher in women (26.46% versus 17.15% in men). The adjusted Cox regression models for sarcopenia showed an association between sarcopenia, sleep disorders (HR = 2.08, 95% IC 1.14–3.80), and long sleep duration (HR = 2.42, 95% IC 1.20–4.91). After 8.24 years of follow-up, there were 2.2 cases of sarcopenia per 100 person-years. This study demonstrates that sleep disorders are an independent risk factor for sarcopenia in Chilean older people. The identification of sleep disorders through self-reported data provides an opportunity for early identification of risk and cost-effective sarcopenia prevention.

Funder

Chilean National Fund for Science and Technology

Chilean National Agency for Research and Development

INTA Tuition/Fee Grant for Aging and Quality of Life Master Studies

Chilean Fund for the Promotion of Scientific and Technological Development

Universidad Mayor Vice-Rectorate for Research Office

Publisher

MDPI AG

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