Abstract
Short and long sleep durations are associated with cognitive dysfunction. Given the increased prevalence of sleep abnormalities in the chronic kidney disease (CKD) population, we tested whether the association between sleep duration and cognitive function differed between older adults with and without CKD. This was a study of 3215 older adults (age ≥60years) enrolled in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2011-14) evaluating sleep duration, cognitive function (immediate recall, delayed recall, verbal fluency, executive function and processing speed and global cognition) and kidney function. We quantified the association between sleep duration and cognitive function using linear regression and tested whether the associations differed among those with CKD and without using a Wald test for interaction. Among 3215 participants, 13.3% reported 2-5hours of sleep/day, 75.2% reported 6-8hours, and 11.5% reported ≥9hours. Persons with CKD were more likely to sleep ≥9hours [odds ratio 1.73 (95% confidence interval 1.22-2.46)]. Among participants with CKD, those with a sleep duration ≥9hours demonstrated worse global cognitive function (P for interaction=.01), immediate recall (P for interaction=.01) and verbal fluency (P for interaction=.004) than those with a sleep duration of 6-8h; no differences were observed for participants with CKD who slept 2-5hours. Among participants without CKD, sleep was not associated with any measures of cognitive function. Longer sleep duration is associated with worse cognitive function only among persons with CKD, and global cognition, delayed recall and verbal fluency are particularly affected. Studies should identify interventions to improve sleep patterns and quality in this population.
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