The long-range goals of this ongoing longitudinal study of midlife aging in women are to accurately quantify the associations of menopause with the development and progression of sleep apnea and diminished sleep quality and to identify factors that influence the associations. Understanding the role of menopause in the development of sleep apnea and diminished sleep quality has important clinical and public health significance. Sleep apnea and diminished sleep quality are associated with significant cardiovascular morbidity, depression, and decrements in daytime performance. Because menopause will become a persistent state in nearly every woman during her lifetime, even a small effect on sleep apnea and insomnia, the major sleep disorders, would translate into significant morbidity. Furthermore, if associations are causal, understanding whether hormone replacement therapy or other factors significantly modify a menopause-sleep disorder link may lead to interventions that could reduce the occurrence and severity of sleep disorders in mid- and later life. The proposed study is designed to: 1) Test the hypothesis that changes over the continuum of pre to post menopause increase the incidence and progression of sleep disordered breathing, adjusted for baseline age, body composition, and other potential confounders, 2) investigate the effects of change in body composition during midlife on associations of menopause and sleep apnea, 3) quantify the risk of insomnia, hypersomnia and diminished sleep quality attributable to early, middle and late perimenopause and post menopause, 4) investigate protective effects of hormone replacement therapy on sleep problems, and 5) investigate genetic vulnerability to diminished sleep quality during menopause. To accomplish these aims, we propose additional research on our unique longitudinal cohort of midlife women, with 7-15 years of previously collected polysomnographic and other data with a) new data collected from overnight in-laboratory protocols with polysomnography conducted at 4-year intervals on 621 women enrolled in the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study, b) new data collected semi-annually by in-home polysomnography and other procedures and monthly diaries on menstrual characteristics and sleep problems on a subset of 280 women over their pre to peri to post menopausal years.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AG014124-07
Application #
6621386
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-RPHB-2 (01))
Program Officer
Monjan, Andrew A
Project Start
1997-01-15
Project End
2006-12-31
Budget Start
2003-01-01
Budget End
2003-12-31
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$359,193
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Wisconsin Madison
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
161202122
City
Madison
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53715
Mirer, Anna G; Young, Terry; Palta, Mari et al. (2017) Sleep-disordered breathing and the menopausal transition among participants in the Sleep in Midlife Women Study. Menopause 24:157-162
Plante, David T; Finn, Laurel A; Hagen, Erika W et al. (2016) Subjective and Objective Measures of Hypersomnolence Demonstrate Divergent Associations with Depression among Participants in the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study. J Clin Sleep Med 12:571-8
Stein, James H; Stern, Rebecca; Barnet, Jodi H et al. (2016) Relationships between sleep apnea, cardiovascular disease risk factors, and aortic pulse wave velocity over 18 years: the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort. Sleep Breath 20:813-7
Hla, Khin Mae; Young, Terry; Hagen, Erika W et al. (2015) Coronary heart disease incidence in sleep disordered breathing: the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study. Sleep 38:677-84
Gunnarsson, Sverrir I; Peppard, Paul E; Korcarz, Claudia E et al. (2015) Minimal nocturnal oxygen saturation predicts future subclinical carotid atherosclerosis: the Wisconsin sleep cohort. J Sleep Res 24:680-6
Mirer, Anna G; Peppard, Paul E; Palta, Mari et al. (2015) Menopausal hormone therapy and sleep-disordered breathing: evidence for a healthy user bias. Ann Epidemiol 25:779-84.e1
Gunnarsson, Sverrir I; Peppard, Paul E; Korcarz, Claudia E et al. (2014) Obstructive sleep apnea is associated with future subclinical carotid artery disease: thirteen-year follow-up from the Wisconsin sleep cohort. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 34:2338-42
Shankar, Anoop; Peppard, Paul E; Young, Terry et al. (2013) Sleep-disordered breathing and retinal microvascular diameter. Atherosclerosis 226:124-8
Peppard, Paul E; Young, Terry; Barnet, Jodi H et al. (2013) Increased prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing in adults. Am J Epidemiol 177:1006-14
Young, Eric; Xiong, Se; Finn, Laurel et al. (2013) Unique sleep disorders profile of a population-based sample of 747 Hmong immigrants in Wisconsin. Soc Sci Med 79:57-65

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