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[Association of sleep quality with hypertension in the elderly of Jino nationality: a multilevel model analysis].

Objective: To evaluate the association of sleep quality with hypertension in the elderly population aged 60 years and older of Jino nationality. Methods: In August 2015, a cross-sectional population-based survey was conducted to investigate the prevalence of hypertension in 805 subjects sampled by multistage stratified and cluster sampling from the elderly population of Jino nationality, the sleep quality was assessed by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI, a poor sleep group was defined as having a global PSQI score>7, a good sleep group was with a score of 7 or less), and the multilevel Logistic regression model was applied to analyze the association of sleep quality with hypertension. Results: A total of 793 eligible participants were available for analysis. Overall, 118 participants (14.9%) were in the poor sleep group, and 675 participants (85.1%) were in the good sleep group. The prevalence of hypertension, prevalence of isolated systolic hypertension, average systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) of the poor sleep group were significantly high than those of the good sleep group[73.7%, 22.0%, (139.2±17.7) and (82.5±10.6) mmHg (1 mmHg=0.133 kPa) vs 33.0%, 9.0%, (131.2±15.0) and (78.5±8.9) mmHg, all P<0.05]. The results of covariate-adjusted multilevel Logistic regression model indicated that subjective sleep quality (OR=2.64, 95% CI: 1.08-6.44), sleep latency (OR=2.98, 95% CI: 1.52-5.86), sleep disturbance (OR=2.93, 95% CI: 1.06-8.10), daytime dysfunction (OR=3.86, 95% CI: 1.74-8.58) and poor sleep (OR=3.98, 95% CI: 2.05-7.73) had the positive correlation with hypertension. Conclusions: The elderly population of Jino nationality with poor sleep have high SBP and DBP. There are positive associations of PSQI and its components with hypertension in the elderly population of Jino nationality.

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