4.5 Article

Healthy lifestyle is associated with reduced cardiovascular disease, depression and mortality in people at elevated risk of sleep apnea

Journal

JOURNAL OF SLEEP RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jsr.14069

Keywords

cardiovascular disease; depression; excessive daytime sleepiness; healthy lifestyle; mortality; sleep apnea

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This study assessed the association between obstructive sleep apnea risk, healthy lifestyle, and common consequences of obstructive sleep apnea. It found that a healthy lifestyle is inversely associated with chronic conditions and all-cause mortality, highlighting the importance of adopting healthy habits in individuals at risk for obstructive sleep apnea.
We assessed: (1) the independent and joint association of obstructive sleep apnea risk and healthy lifestyle with common consequences (excessive daytime sleepiness, depression, cardiovascular disease and stroke) of obstructive sleep apnea; and (2) the effect of healthy lifestyle on survival in people with increased obstructive sleep apnea risk. Data from 13,694 adults (median age 46 years; 50% men) were used for cross-sectional and survival analyses (mortality over 15 years). A healthy lifestyle score with values from 0 (most unhealthy) to 5 (most healthy) was determined based on diet, alcohol intake, physical activity, smoking and body mass index. In the cross-sectional analysis, obstructive sleep apnea risk was positively associated with all chronic conditions and excessive daytime sleepiness in a dose-response manner (p for trend < 0.001). The healthy lifestyle was inversely associated with all chronic conditions (p for trend < 0.001) but not with excessive daytime sleepiness (p for trend = 0.379). Higher healthy lifestyle score was also associated with reduced odds of depression and cardiovascular disease. We found an inverse relationship between healthy lifestyle score with depression (p for trend < 0.001), cardiovascular disease (p for trend = 0.003) and stroke (p for trend = 0.025) among those who had high obstructive sleep apnea risk. In the survival analysis, we found an inverse association between healthy lifestyle and all-cause mortality for all categories of obstructive sleep apnea risk (moderate/high- and high-risk groups [p for trend < 0.001]). This study emphasises the crucial role of a healthy lifestyle in mitigating the effects of obstructive sleep apnea risk in individuals with an elevated obstructive sleep apnea risk.

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