Examining Daily Associations Among Sleep, Stress, and Blood Pressure Across Adulthood

Author:

Newman David B1ORCID,Gordon Amie M2,Prather Aric A1ORCID,Berry Mendes Wendy1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California , San Francisco , CA , USA

2. Department of Psychology, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Sleep can have consequential effects on people’s health and well-being, and these effects may vary among younger and older adults. Purpose The goal of the present study was to investigate how sleep relates to physiologic and stress responses in daily life across adulthood. Methods We used an Ecological Momentary Assessment method in a large sample of participants (N = 4,359; Mage = 46.75, SD = 12.39; 69.30% male, 29.85% female) who completed morning sleep diaries, reported subjective stress, and recorded their heart rate and blood pressure for 21 days. Sleep was assessed with self-reports of duration, efficiency, and quality. Results Using multilevel modeling, between-person analyses showed that sleep duration, efficiency, and quality were negatively related to morning heart rate and stress, such that people who slept longer, more efficiently, or better experienced lower heart rate and stress compared to those who slept shorter, less efficiently, or worse. Within-person analyses showed that sleep duration, efficiency, and quality predicted morning heart rate, blood pressure (though less consistently), and stress. That is, people experienced lower heart, blood pressure, and stress following nights when they slept longer, more efficiently, or better than they typically did. These within-person relationships were moderated by age, such that the effects of better and longer sleep on lower morning heart rate, blood pressure, and stress were stronger among younger than older adults. Conclusion These findings suggest that daily variations in sleep show immediate associations with stress and physiologic responses, but these daily variations have a stronger relationship among younger compared to older adults.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

National Institute of Mental Health

Samsung Electronics Co

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

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