
The never-ending demands of the weekdays, influenced by both work and school schedules, can have a deleterious impact on sleep health. A new study presented at ESC Congress 2024 shows that people that ‘catch up’ on their sleep during the weekends have a considerably lower risk of heart disease.
“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 via a press release. “The association becomes even more pronounced among individuals who regularly experience inadequate sleep on weekdays.”
To discern the relationship between compensated weekend sleep and heart health, researchers utilized data from the UK Biobank project to assess 90,903 subjects. They recorded data 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), they noted.