November 2, 2024

Extra Sleep on Weekends Linked to a 20% Lower Heart Disease Risk

Extra Sleep On Weekends Linked To A 20% Lower Heart Disease RiskHeart Sleep Concept - Extra Sleep On Weekends Linked To A 20% Lower Heart Disease Risk
Catching up on sleep during weekends may reduce heart disease risk by 20%, according to a large study presented at ESC Congress 2024.

People who manage to catch up on lost sleep over the weekend might be doing their hearts a big favor, reducing their risk of heart disease by as much as one-fifth.

This finding comes from a study presented at ESC Congress 2024, which analyzed sleep data from over 90,000 UK Biobank participants. The research highlights the protective effect of compensatory sleep, especially in individuals who typically experience insufficient sleep during the workweek.

Sleep Compensation and Heart Health

The demands of the working week, often influenced by school or work schedules, can lead to sleep disruption and deprivation. However, new research presented at ESC Congress 2024 shows that people that ‘catch up’ on their sleep by sleeping in at weekends may see their risk of heart disease fall by one-fifth.

“Sufficient compensatory sleep is linked to a lower risk of heart disease,” said study co-author Mr Yanjun Song of the State Key Laboratory of Infectious Disease, Fuwai Hospital, National Centre for Cardiovascular Disease, Beijing, China. “The association becomes even more pronounced among individuals who regularly experience inadequate sleep on weekdays.”

Research on Sleep and Cardiac Risk

It is well known that people who suffer sleep deprivation ‘sleep in’ on days off to mitigate the effects of sleep deprivation. However, there is a lack of research on whether this compensatory sleep helps heart health.

The authors used data from 90,903 subjects involved in the UK Biobank project, and to evaluate the relationship between compensated weekend sleep and heart disease, sleep data was recorded using accelerometers and grouped by quartiles (divided into four approximately equal groups from most compensated sleep to least). Q1 (n = 22,475 was the least compensated, having -16.05 hours to -0.26 hours (ie, having even less sleep); Q2 (n = 22,901) had -0.26 to +0.45 hours; Q3 (n=22,692) had +0.45 to +1.28 hours, and Q4 (n=22,695) had the most compensatory sleep (1.28 to 16.06 hours).

Evaluating Sleep Patterns and Heart Disease

Sleep deprivation was self-reported, with those self-reporting less than 7 hours sleep per night defined as having sleep deprivation. A total of 19,816 (21.8%) of participants were defined as sleep deprived. The rest of the cohort may have experienced occasional inadequate sleep, but on average, their daily hours of sleep did not meet the criteria for sleep deprivation – the authors recognize this a limitation to their data.

Hospitalization records and cause of death registry information were used to diagnose various cardiac diseases including ischaemic heart disease (IHD), heart failure (HF), atrial fibrillation (AF), and stroke.

With a median follow-up of almost 14 years, participants in the group with the most compensatory sleep (quartile 4) were 19% less likely to develop heart disease than those with the least (quartile 1). In the subgroup of patients with daily sleep deprivation those with the most compensatory sleep had a 20% lower risk of developing heart disease than those with the least. The analysis did not show any differences between men and women.

Meeting: ESC Congress 2024

Co-author Mr Zechen Liu, also of State Key Laboratory of Infectious Disease, Fuwai Hospital, National Centre for Cardiovascular Disease, Beijing, China, added: “Our results show that for the significant proportion of the population in modern society that suffers from sleep deprivation, those who have the most ‘catch-up’ sleep at weekends have significantly lower rates of heart disease than those with the least.”

Funding: This work was supported by grants from CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (No. 2021-I2M-1-008).