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Sleeping 9 Hours a Night May Raise Stroke Risk

Excessive sleeping or taking long naps was tied to an increased risk of having a stroke.

Sleeping a lot may increase the risk for stroke, a new study has found.

Chinese researchers followed 31,750 men and women whose average age was 62 for an average of six years, using physical examinations and self-reported data on sleep. They found that compared with sleeping (or being in bed trying to sleep) seven to eight hours a night, sleeping nine or more hours increased the relative risk for stroke by 23 percent. Sleeping less than six hours a night had no effect on stroke incidence.

The study, in Neurology, also found that midday napping for more than 90 minutes a day was associated with a 25 percent increased risk for stroke compared with napping 30 minutes or less. And people who both slept more than nine hours and napped more than 90 minutes were 85 percent more likely to have a stroke.

The study controlled for smoking, drinking, exercise, family history of stroke, body mass index and other health and behavioral characteristics.

The reason for the association is unclear, but long sleep duration is associated with increased inflammation, unfavorable lipid profiles and increased waist circumference, factors known to increase cardiovascular risk.

“Longer sleep duration is an independent risk factor for stroke,” said the senior author, Dr. Xiaomin Zhang, a professor at Tongji Medical College in Wuhan, China. “Maintaining appropriate sleep duration might hold great promise as primary prevention of stroke.”

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section D, Page 4 of the New York edition with the headline: Sleep: Stroke Risk in Too Much Rest. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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