TY - JOUR PY - 2018// TI - Neighborhood stress and autonomic nervous system activity during sleep JO - Sleep A1 - Mellman, Thomas Alan A1 - Bell, Kimberly Ann A1 - Abu-Bader, Soleman Hassan A1 - Kobayashi, Ihori SP - e059 EP - e059 VL - 41 IS - 6 N2 - OBJECTIVES: Stressful neighborhood environments are known to adversely impact health and contribute to health disparities but underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Healthy sleep can provide a respite from sustained sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity. Our objective was to evaluate relationships between neighborhood stress and nocturnal and daytime SNS and parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) activity.

METHODS: Eighty five urban-residing African Americans (56.5% female; mean age of 23.0) participated. Evaluation included surveys of neighborhood stress and sleep-related vigilance; and continuous ECG and actigraphic recording in participants' homes from which heart rate variability (HRV) analysis for low frequency/high frequency (LF/HF) ratio and normalized high frequency (nHF), as indicators of SNS and PNS activity, respectively, and total sleep time (TST), and wake after sleep onset were derived.

RESULTS: All significant relationships with HRV measures were from the sleep period. Neighborhood disorder correlated negatively with nHF (r = -.24, p =.035). There were also significant correlations of HRV indices with sleep duration and sleep fears. Among females, LF/HF correlated with exposure to violence, r =.39, p =.008 and nHF with census tract rates for violent crime (r = -.35, p =.035). In a stepwise regression, TST accounted for the variance contributed by violent crime to nHF in the female participants.

CONCLUSIONS: Further investigation of relationships between neighborhood environments and SNS/PNS balance during sleep and their consequences, and strategies for mitigating such effects would have implications for health disparities.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0161-8105 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsy059 ID - ref1 ER -