Predictors of sleepiness in a large-scale epidemiology study ESSE-RF
Mikhail Bochkarev, Lyudmila Korostovtseva, Oxana Rotar, Elena Verbitskaya, Yurii Sviryaev, Yulia Zhernakova, Svetlana Shalnova, Alexandra Konradi, Irina Chazova, Sergey Boytsov, Evgeny Shlyakhto

TL;DR
This study identifies factors linked to daytime sleepiness in Russians, including sleep disorders, health conditions, and lifestyle factors.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the predictors of excessive daytime sleepiness in a Russian population using a large-scale epidemiological dataset.
Findings
Frequent sleepiness was reported by 5.8% of participants and was linked to sleep disorders and medical conditions.
Abnormal anxiety, low HDL cholesterol, and high salt intake were also significant predictors of sleepiness.
The study highlights the need for individualized treatment approaches to address sleep health.
Abstract
To identify predictors of excessive daytime sleepiness we analyzed data from the ‘Epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases in regions of Russia (ESSE-RF)’ study. Data from participants of the cohort study ESSE-RF (2012–2013), aged 25–64 years, from 13 regions of Russia were analyzed (2012–2013). The participants were interviewed regarding their sleep complaints, including difficulties with initiating and maintaining sleep, sleepiness, and use of sleeping pills. Sleepiness was considered significant if it occurred at least three times a week. The examination encompassed social, demographic, and anthropometric measures, lifestyle factors, self-reported diseases, and laboratory parameters. The final analysis included 13,255 respondents. Frequent (≥3 times/week) sleepiness was reported by 5,8%, and occasional sleepiness (1–2 times/week) by 10.8% of respondents. Multivariate regression…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Wakefulness Research · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue
