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

Older women with sleep-breathing problems more likely to see decline in daily functions

Risk more than doubles for women with moderate to severe breathing disruptions during sleep

2014-11-12
(Press-News.org) Older women with disordered breathing during sleep were found to be at greater risk of decline in the ability to perform daily activities, such as grocery shopping and meal preparation, according to a new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the University of California, San Francisco.

The study was published Nov. 6 in the online edition of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

The findings are notable given the aging of the population - an estimated 3.7 million Americans will turn 65 in 2015, and by 2030, 19 percent of the U.S. population will be 65 or older - and the fact that sleep-disordered breathing is treatable. Older adults are as much as four times as likely as middle-aged individuals to have problems with breathing during sleep.

Sleep-disordered breathing involves repeated interruptions or decreases in breathing during sleep, which often leads to fragmented sleep and hypoxemia, or low blood oxygen levels. Doctors rate the severity of sleep-disordered breathing with the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), which reflects the number of breathing interruptions (apneas) and the number of significant decreases in breathing (hypopneas) per hour of sleep.

The study found that women with an AHI on the moderate to severe side, with 15 or more breathing disruptions per hour of sleep, had a 2.2 times greater odds of decline in daily activity functions during the evaluation period, which averaged five years between baseline evaluation and follow-up.

"Because sleep-disordered breathing can be treated effectively, it is possible that treatment could help prevent decline in important areas of functioning that allow older adults to remain independent," says Adam Spira, PhD, an associate professor in the Department of Mental Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the study's lead author. "As is often the case, more research is needed to investigate this possibility."

Because the study was observational, the researchers can't conclusively state that sleep-disordered breathing caused the functional decline, but the research does point to a strong link.

Earlier studies involving older men have linked sleep-disordered breathing with frailty and death. The authors believe this is one of the first studies to assess the impact of sleep-disordered breathing on decline in older women's ability to perform basic functions associated with independent living.

The study included 302 women, with a mean age of 82.3 years. At the start of the study, participants underwent an in-home sleep evaluation. They were also asked whether they had any difficulty performing daily activities, including heavy housework, shopping and preparing meals, or any challenges with mobility, such as walking several blocks or climbing or descending stairs. Participants' self-reported daily activities and mobility were assessed once again in a follow-up evaluation.

The researchers say they believe it is the low blood-oxygen levels caused by sleep-disordered breathing that cause the trouble with daily tasks, and not sleep fragmentation, which is also increased by sleep-disordered breathing.

The authors note that women who reported no difficulties with daily activities during their baseline evaluation but a moderate-to-high AHI had a somewhat higher risk of reporting deterioration in daily-activity function in the follow-up evaluation. No links between sleep-disordered breathing severity and decline in mobility were observed.

INFORMATION:

The study was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grants AG026720, AG05394, AG05407, AR35582, AR35583, AR35584, R01 AG005407, R01 AG027576-22, 2 R01 AG005394-22A1, 2 R01 AG0275, 74-22A1, HL40489, K24AG031155.

"Sleep-Disordered Breathing and Functional Decline in Older Women" was written by Adam P. Spira, PhD, Katie L. Stone, PhD, George W. Rebok, PhD, Naresh M. Punjabi, MD, PhD, Susan Redline, MD, MPH, Sonia Ancoli-Israel, PhD and Kristine Yaffe, MD.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Depression, overwhelming guilt in preschool years linked to brain changes

Depression, overwhelming guilt in preschool years linked to brain changes
2014-11-12
In school-age children previously diagnosed with depression as preschoolers, a key brain region involved in emotion is smaller than in their peers who were not depressed, scientists have shown. The research, by a team at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, also suggests that the size of the brain's right anterior insula may predict the risk of future bouts of depression, potentially giving researchers an anatomical marker to identify those at high risk for recurrence. The study is published online Nov. 12 in the journal JAMA Psychiatry. There is ...

Genetic tweak gave yellow fever mosquitoes a nose for human odor

Genetic tweak gave yellow fever mosquitoes a nose for human odor
2014-11-12
One of the world's deadliest mosquitoes sustains its taste for human blood thanks in part to a genetic tweak that makes it more sensitive to human odor, according to new research. Researchers report in the journal Nature that the yellow fever mosquito contains a version of an odor-detecting gene in its antennae that is highly attuned to sulcatone, a compound prevalent in human odor. The researchers found that the gene, AaegOr4, is more abundant and more sensitive in the human-preferring "domestic" form of the yellow fever mosquito than in its ancestral "forest" form that ...

Puree helps kids make smooth transition to vegetables

2014-11-12
Adding tiny amounts of vegetable puree to milk and then rice at the time of weaning makes children more likely to eat vegetables, new University of Leeds research shows. Infants who consumed either milk (breast milk or formula) followed by rice mixed with vegetable puree ate nearly half as many vegetables again as infants who ate just milk followed by baby rice. Professor Marion Hetherington, of the School of Psychology at the University of Leeds, led the study. She said: "We took inspiration from French mothers, as previous studies in this area have shown that they ...

UC Davis investigational medication used to resolve life-threatening seizures in children

2014-11-12
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) -- In its first clinical application in pediatric patients, an investigational medication developed and manufactured at UC Davis has been found to effectively treat children with life-threatening and difficult-to-control epileptic seizures without side effects, according to a research report by scientists at UC Davis and Northwestern University. The investigational formulation of allopregnanolone was manufactured by UC Davis Health System's Good Manufacturing Practice Laboratory. Two children were treated with the allopregnanolone formulation, one ...

The backwards brain? Study shows how brain maps develop to help us perceive the world

The backwards brain? Study shows how brain maps develop to help us perceive the world
2014-11-12
LA JOLLA, CA - November 12, 2014 - Driving to work becomes routine--but could you drive the entire way in reverse gear? Humans, like many animals, are accustomed to seeing objects pass behind us as we go forward. Moving backwards feels unnatural. In a new study, scientists from The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) reveal that moving forward actually trains the brain to perceive the world normally. The findings also show that the relationship between neurons in the eye and the brain is more complicated than previously thought--in fact, the order in which we see things ...

Gene sequencing projects link two mutations to Ewing sarcoma subtype with poor prognosis

2014-11-12
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. - November 12, 2014) An international collaboration has identified frequent mutations in two genes that often occur together in Ewing sarcoma (EWS) and that define a subtype of the cancer associated with reduced survival. The research, conducted by the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital-Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project and the Institut Curie-Inserm through the International Cancer Genome Consortium, appears in the current issue of the scientific journal Cancer Discovery. Mutations in the genes STAG2 and TP53 have previously been ...

Giant otter's repertoire includes 22 distinct vocalizations

2014-11-12
Giant otters may have a vocal repertoire with 22 distinct vocalization types produced by adults and 11 neonate vocalization types, according to a study published November 12, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Christina Mumm and Mirjam Knörnschild from University of Ulm, Germany. Giant otters, found in South America, are very social and frequently vocalizing animals. They live in groups that may vary, but generally include a reproductive pair and their offspring, born in different years. Individuals engage in shared group activities and hold different social ...

The whole-genome sequences of the world's oldest living people published

2014-11-12
Using fewer than twenty genomes, researchers were unable to find rare protein-altering variants significantly associated with extreme longevity, according to a study published November 12, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Hinco Gierman from Stanford University and colleagues. Supercentenarians are the world's oldest people, living beyond 110 years of age. Seventy-four are alive worldwide, with twenty-two living in the United States. The authors of this study performed whole-genome sequencing on 17 supercentenarians to explore the genetic basis underlying ...

Focus on self-regulating skills in kindergarten may provide lasting academic effects

2014-11-12
An educational approach in kindergarten focused on the development of executive functions--the ability to avoid distractions, focus attention, hold relevant details in working memory, and regulate impulsive behavior--in children improved academic learning in and beyond kindergarten, helping to overcome deficits in school readiness associated with poverty, according to a study published November 12, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Clancy Blair and C. Cybele Raver from New York University. Based on the results, the authors suggest that executive function ...

Focusing on executive functions in kindergarten leads to lasting academic improvements

2014-11-12
An educational approach focused on the development of children's executive functions - the ability to avoid distractions, focus attention, hold relevant information in working memory, and regulate impulsive behavior - improved academic learning in and beyond kindergarten, according to a new study by researchers at NYU's Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. Because some effects were especially pronounced in high-poverty schools, the findings hold promise for closing the poverty-related achievement gap and suggest that an emphasis on executive ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Low-cost system will improve communications among industrial machines

Elderberry juice shows benefits for weight management, metabolic health

A new era in genetic engineering

Study identifies coastal black pine trees resistant to tsunamis and strong winds

From gender dysphoria to special skills: decoding the link

Study advances possible blood test for early-stage Alzheimer’s disease

New international research collaboration to develop and test an improved dietary supplement for pregnant women

Presenting a path forward for future genetically-modified pig heart transplants: lessons learned from second patient

When the past meets the future: Innovative drone mapping unlocks secrets of Bronze Age ‘mega fortress’ in the Caucasus

AI could improve the success of IVF treatment

Moving in sync, slowly, in glassy liquids

Climate change linked with worse HIV prevention and care

Exeter launches second round of global funding to tackle antifungal drug resistance

Harnessing AI to respond to the global threat of antimicrobial resistance

New findings may help researchers develop a grapefruit devoid of compounds that affect medication levels

Advanced wearable robot eases heavy lifting and other injury-causing tasks for workers

Does job strain compromise long-term sleep quality?

Artificial intelligence–based method assesses depression in business leaders

Study assesses the benefits of alfalfa-almond intercropping

Mediterranean sharks continue to decline despite conservation progress

New treatment option for severe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in children shows promise

Repairing a domestication mutation in tomato leads to an earlier yield

Focal volume optics for composite structuring in transparent solids

Novel mix-charged nanofiltration membrane developed for high-salinity wastewater treatment

Fishy business: Male medaka mating limits revealed

Morning coffee may protect the heart better than all-day coffee drinking

For many low-income single moms, government aid serves as their paid family leave, study shows

Tumor-secreted protein may hold the key to better treatments for deadly brain tumor, study finds

Ready to quit vaping in the new year? A new study uncovers the best ways

Regular physical activity before cancer diagnosis may lower progression and death risks

[Press-News.org] Older women with sleep-breathing problems more likely to see decline in daily functions
Risk more than doubles for women with moderate to severe breathing disruptions during sleep