PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Insomnia may significantly increase stroke risk

American Heart Association Rapid Access Journal Report

2014-04-03
(Press-News.org) The risk of stroke may be much higher in people with insomnia compared to those who don't have trouble sleeping, according to new research in the American Heart Association journal Stroke. The risk also seems to be far greater when insomnia occurs as a young adult compared to those who are older, said researchers who reviewed the randomly-selected health records of more than 21,000 people with insomnia and 64,000 non-insomniacs in Taiwan. They found: Insomnia raised the likelihood of subsequent hospitalization for stroke by 54 percent over four years. The incidence of stroke¬ was eight times higher among those diagnosed with insomnia between 18-34 years old. Beyond age 35, the risk continually decreased. Diabetes also appeared to increase the risk of stroke in insomniacs. "We feel strongly that individuals with chronic insomnia, particularly younger persons, see their physician to have stroke risk factors assessed and, when indicated, treated appropriately," said Ya-Wen Hsu, Ph.D., study author and an assistant professor at Chia Nan University of Pharmacy and Science and the Department of Medical Research at Chi-Mei Medical Center in Taiwan. "Our findings also highlight the clinical importance of screening for insomnia at younger ages. Treating insomnia is also very important, whether by medication or cognitive therapy." The study is the first to try to quantify the risk in a large population group and the first to assess if the risk of stroke differs by insomnia subtypes, Hsu said. Researchers divided participants — none of whom had a previous diagnosis of stroke or sleep apnea — into different types of insomnia. In general, insomnia included difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep; chronic or persistent insomnia lasted one to six months; relapse insomnia was a return of insomnia after being diagnosed free of disease for more than six months at any assessment point during the four-year study; and remission was a change from a diagnosis of insomnia to non-insomnia at the subsequent time point. During the four-year follow-up, 583 insomniacs and 962 non-insomniacs were admitted for stroke. Persistent insomniacs had a higher three-year cumulative incidence of stroke compared to the other participants in the remission group. The mechanism linking insomnia to stroke is not fully understood, but evidence shows that insomnia may alter cardiovascular health via systematic inflammation, impaired glucose tolerance, increased blood pressure or sympathetic hyperactivity. Some behavioral factors (e.g., physical activity, diet, alcohol use and smoking) and psychological factors like stress might affect the observed relationship. The researchers said it's unclear if the findings also apply to people in other nations, but studies in other countries have also pointed to a relationship between insomnia and stroke. "Individuals should not simply accept insomnia as a benign, although difficult, condition that carries no major health risks," Hsu said. "They should seek medical evaluation of other possible risk factors that might contribute to stroke." INFORMATION: Co-authors are Ming-Ping Wu, M.D., Ph.D.; Huey-Juan Lin, M.D.; Shih-Feng Weng, Ph.D.;Chung-Han Ho, Ph.D.; and Jhi-Joung Wang, M.D., Ph.D. Author disclosures and funding information are on the manuscript. Additional Resources An Infographic and photo are available on the right column of the release link See previous AHA news about insomnia and cardiovascular disease. For the latest heart and stroke news, follow @HeartNews on Twitter.
For stroke science, follow the Stroke journal at @StrokeAHA_ASA.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Higher total folate intake may be associated with lower risk of exfoliation glaucoma

2014-04-03
BOSTON (April 4, 2014) — Exfoliation glaucoma (EG), caused by exfoliation syndrome, a condition in which white clumps of fibrillar material form in the eye, is the most common cause of secondary open-angle glaucoma and a leading cause of blindness and visual impairment. Effective strategies for preventing this disease are lacking. Elevated homocysteine, which may enhance exfoliation material formation, is one possible risk factor that has received significant research attention. Research studies demonstrate that high intake of vitamin B6, vitamin B12 and folate ...

Off the shelf, on the skin: Stick-on electronic patches for health monitoring

Off the shelf, on the skin: Stick-on electronic patches for health monitoring
2014-04-03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Wearing a fitness tracker on your wrist or clipped to your belt is so 2013. Engineers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Northwestern University have demonstrated thin, soft stick-on patches that stretch and move with the skin and incorporate commercial, off-the-shelf chip-based electronics for sophisticated wireless health monitoring. The patches stick to the skin like a temporary tattoo and incorporate a unique microfluidic construction with wires folded like origami to allow the patch to bend and flex without being constrained ...

Geology spans the minute and gigantic, from skeletonized leaves in China to water on mars

Geology spans the minute and gigantic, from skeletonized leaves in China to water on mars
2014-04-03
Boulder, Colo., USA – New Geology studies include a mid-Cretaceous greenhouse world; the Vredefort meteoric impact event and the Vredefort dome, South Africa; shallow creeping faults in Italy; a global sink for immense amounts of water on Mars; the Funeral Mountains, USA; insect-mediated skeletonization of fern leaves in China; first-ever tectonic geomorphology study in Bhutan; the Ethiopian Large Igneous Province; the Central Andean Plateau; the Scandinavian Ice Sheet; the India-Asia collision zone; the Snake River Plain; and northeast Brazil. Highlights are provided ...

Calcium waves help the roots tell the shoots

2014-04-03
MADISON – For Simon Gilroy, sometimes seeing is believing. In this case, it was seeing the wave of calcium sweep root-to-shoot in the plants the University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of botany is studying that made him a believer. Gilroy and colleagues, in a March 24, 2014 paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, showed what long had been suspected but long had eluded scientists: that calcium is involved in rapid plant cell communication. It's a finding that has implications for those interested in how plants adapt to and thrive in changing ...

Smoking may dull obese women's ability to taste fat and sugar

Smoking may dull obese womens ability to taste fat and sugar
2014-04-03
Cigarette smoking among obese women appears to interfere with their ability to taste fats and sweets, a new study shows. Despite craving high-fat, sugary foods, these women were less likely than others to perceive these tastes, which may drive them to consume more calories. M. Yanina Pepino, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and Julie Mennella, PhD, a biopsychologist at the Monell Center in Philadelphia, where the research was conducted, studied four groups of women ages 21 to 41: obese smokers, obese nonsmokers, ...

Dose-escalated hypofractionated IMRT, conventional IMRT for prostate cancer have like side effects

2014-04-03
Fairfax, Va., April 3, 2014—Dose-escalated intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) with use of a moderate hypofractionation regimen (72 Gy in 2.4 Gy fractions) can safely treat patients with localized prostate cancer with limited grade 2 or 3 late toxicity, according to a study published in the April 1, 2014 edition of the International Journal of Radiation Oncology · Biology · Physics (Red Journal), the official scientific journal of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO). Previous randomized clinical trials have shown that dose-escalated ...

Fences cause 'ecological meltdown'

Fences cause ecological meltdown
2014-04-03
NEW YORK (Embargoed – Not for release until 14:00 EST 3 April 2014) Wildlife fences are constructed for a variety of reasons including to prevent the spread of diseases, protect wildlife from poachers, and to help manage small populations of threatened species. Human–wildlife conflict is another common reason for building fences: Wildlife can damage valuable livestock, crops, or infrastructure, some species carry diseases of agricultural concern, and a few threaten human lives. At the same time, people kill wild animals for food, trade, or to defend lives or property, and ...

Quantum photon properties revealed in another particle -- the plasmon

2014-04-03
For years, researchers have been interested in developing quantum computers—the theoretical next generation of technology that will outperform conventional computers. Instead of holding data in bits, the digital units used by computers today, quantum computers store information in units called "qubits." One approach for computing with qubits relies on the creation of two single photons that interfere with one another in a device called a waveguide. Results from a recent applied science study at Caltech support the idea that waveguides coupled with another quantum particle—the ...

NIST launches a new US time standard: NIST-F2 atomic clock

NIST launches a new US time standard: NIST-F2 atomic clock
2014-04-03
The U.S. Department of Commerce's National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has officially launched a new atomic clock, called NIST-F2, to serve as a new U.S. civilian time and frequency standard, along with the current NIST-F1 standard. NIST-F2 would neither gain nor lose one second in about 300 million years, making it about three times as accurate as NIST-F1, which has served as the standard since 1999. Both clocks use a "fountain" of cesium atoms to determine the exact length of a second. NIST scientists recently reported the first official performance ...

Taming a poison: Saving plants from cyanide with carbon dioxide

2014-04-03
The scientific world is one step closer to understanding how nature uses carbon-capture to tame poisons, thanks to a recent discovery of cyanoformate by researchers at Saint Mary's University (Halifax, Canada) and the University of Jyväskylä (Finland). This simple ion — which is formed when cyanide bonds to carbon dioxide — is a by-product of the fruit-ripening process that has evaded detection for decades. Chemists have long understood the roles presence of cyanide (CN−) and carbon dioxide (CO2) in fruit ripening, but have always observed them independently. This ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Reducing antimicrobial resistance: accelerated efforts are needed to meet the EU targets

Gaming for the good!

Early adoption of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor in patients hospitalized with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction

New study finds atrial fibrillation common in newly diagnosed heart failure patients, and makes prognosis significantly worse

Chitnis receives funding for study of wearable ultrasound systems

Weisburd receives funding for safer stronger together initiative

Kaya advancing AI literacy

Wang studying effects of micronutrient supplementation

Quandela, the CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay and Université Paris Cité join forces to accelerate research and innovation in quantum photonics

Pulmonary vein isolation with optimized linear ablation vs pulmonary vein isolation alone for persistent AF

New study finds prognostic value of coronary calcium scores effective in predicting risk of heart attack and overall mortality in both women and men

New fossil reveals the evolution of flying reptiles

Redefining net zero will not stop global warming – scientists say

Prevalence of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic syndrome stages by social determinants of health

Tiny worm makes for big evolutionary discovery

Cause of the yo-yo effect deciphered

Suicide rates for young male cancer survivors triple in recent years

Achalasia and esophageal cancer: A case report and literature review

Authoritative review makes connections between electron density topology, future of materials modeling and how we understand mechanisms of phenomena in familiar devices at the atomistic level

Understanding neonatal infectious diseases in low- and middle-income countries: New insights from a 30-year study

This year’s dazzling aurora produced a spectacular display… of citizen science

New oral drug to calm abdominal pain

New framework champions equity in AI for health care

We finally know where black holes get their magnetic fields: Their parents

Multiple sclerosis drug may help with poor working memory

The MIT Press releases workshop report on the future of open access publishing and policy

Why substitute sugar with maple syrup?

New study investigates insecticide contamination in Minnesota’s water

The Einstein Foundation Berlin awards €500,000 prize to advance research quality

Mitochondrial encephalopathy caused by a new biallelic repeat expansion

[Press-News.org] Insomnia may significantly increase stroke risk
American Heart Association Rapid Access Journal Report