4.3 Article

Relation of Chronotype to Sleep Complaints in the General Finnish Population

Journal

CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 311-317

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.3109/07420528.2012.655870

Keywords

Circadian; Eveningness; Hypnotics; Insomnia; Morningness

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Individuals show variation in their preference for the daily timing of activities. In this study the authors analyzed whether chronotypes associate with sleep duration and sleep-related complaints. The authors used the National FINRISK Study 2007 Survey data on 3696 women and 3162 men, representative of the Finnish population aged 25 yrs and older, for the assessment of chronotype and self-reported sleep. Evening types experienced insomnia symptoms, had nightmares, and had used recently hypnotics significantly more often than other chronotypes among both men and women. In a multinominal logistic regression model predicting insufficient sleep, the association of eveningness with insufficient sleep was not abolished after adjustment for sex, age, and sleep duration. The prevalence of short sleepers was significantly higher in evening types among men than among women, whereas that of long sleepers was significantly higher in evening types among both men and women, as compared with the other chronotypes. These results indicate that eveningness predisposes individuals to a range of sleep complaints. (Author correspondence: ilona.merikanto@helsinki.fi)

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