The association between sleep duration trajectories and intrinsic capacity in middle-aged and older adults in China: a longitudinal Chinese study assessing healthy aging
Chengzhen Yang, Xi Chen, Xia Wan, Yinghua Cai

TL;DR
This study explores how sleep patterns over time affect physical and mental abilities in middle-aged and older Chinese adults.
Contribution
The study identifies joint sleep duration trajectories and their novel associations with intrinsic capacity in aging populations.
Findings
Persistent short nighttime sleep is linked to higher risk of low intrinsic capacity.
Moderate nighttime sleep combined with moderate napping is associated with high intrinsic capacity.
Moderate napping may offset adverse effects of short nighttime sleep.
Abstract
Previous studies have focused mostly on the association between a single measurement of nighttime sleep duration and intrinsic capacity, making revealing the dynamic interaction between nighttime sleep duration and nap duration as individuals age throughout their lifespan difficult. This study aimed to identify the joint developmental trajectories of nighttime sleep duration and nap duration and explore their associations with intrinsic capacity. Data from 5,618 participants in the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study across three waves (2011, 2013, 2015) were analyzed. Group-based multi-trajectory modeling was employed to identify joint developmental trajectories of nighttime sleep and nap duration, and a binary logistic regression analysis was used to explore the associations between joint developmental trajectories and intrinsic capacity. Four distinct joint developmental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue · Sleep and Wakefulness Research
