Featured

Poor sleep quality may negatively impact physical health: Study

People with poor objective sleep quality exhibit unfavourable physical health indicators, particularly elevated blood pressure, a study has found.

Objective sleep quality consists not only of the total sleep duration, but also the amount of the different sleep stages, the duration of wake period, and the frequency of awakenings.

Researchers from the University of Tsukuba in Japan conducted a comprehensive study involving 100 adults aged 3059 years by employing electroencephalogram (EEG) measurements to assess sleep quality for five nights at the participants’ homes.

Electroencephalography is a method to record an electrogram of the spontaneous electrical activity of the brain.

Additionally, detailed health examinations were conducted at a health care facility in Tokyo.

Ten sleep parameters derived from the EEG data collected during the five-night home study were used to categorise participants into three groupsnamely, the good sleep group (comprising 39 participants), the intermediate group (comprising 46 participants), and the poor sleep group (comprising 15 participants).

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, utilised a form of unsupervised machine learning within the domain of artificial intelligence (AI) to evaluate 50 physical health parameters across these groups.

The researchers observed statistically significant differences in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, ?-GTP (a marker of liver function), and serum creatinine (a marker of kidney function).

Of these, the differences in systolic blood pressure — which measures the pressure in arteries when the heart beats — were particularly pronounced, consistently higher among participants of the poor sleep group, the researchers said.

The study unveiled a weak correlation between objective sleep quality, as measured by EEG during sleep, and subjective sleep quality.

Notably, only objective sleep quality exhibited an association with systolic blood pressure, the researchers said.

Medlarge

Recent Posts

Diarrhea main killer of kids under 5, adults above 70: Study

Diarrhea remains one of the leading killers of children under five and the elderly, particularly…

1 day ago

Healthy population fuels productivity, drives economic growth: Union Health Secretary

Union Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava on Thursday said that healthcare is not only a…

1 day ago

NEET-UG exam soon to shift from offline to online, NTA to undergo re-structuring

Union Education and Health ministries are working on a proposal to switch the medical entrance…

4 days ago

Metropolis Healthcare introduces Innovative Blood Collection Technology

In an effort to improve the patient experience, Ameera Shah-led Metropolis Healthcare Limited, India’s second-largest…

4 days ago