Older men exhibited 28% higher daytime and 75% higher nighttime norepinephrine levels than young men (P<0.01), potentially linking increased sympathetic activity to age-related sleep disturbances.
Observational
Effect estimate: +28% day, +75% night
p-value: p=<0.01
Young and old healthy subjects with indwelling venous cannulae were found to undergo significant diurnal variations in plasma catecholamine levels. Both norepinephrine and epinephrine levels peaked in late morning and reached lowest values at night during sleep. Catecholamine levels were similar during slow wave and rapid eye movement sleep. While epinephrine levels were unaffected by age, norepinephrine levels were greater in older subjects by 28% during the day (at 1100 h; P less than 0.01) and by 75% at night (between 2200--0900 h; P less than 0.01). Older subjects slept less well; they had 90% less stage 4 sleep, 27% less rapid eye movement sleep, and twice as much wakefulness at night (P less than 0.05). These findings raise the possibility that this well known age effect on sleep may be related to increased sympathetic nervous system activity.
Prinz et al. (Wed,) conducted a observational in Healthy. Older age vs. Young age was evaluated on Plasma norepinephrine levels (+28% day, +75% night, p=<0.01). Older men exhibited 28% higher daytime and 75% higher nighttime norepinephrine levels than young men (P<0.01), potentially linking increased sympathetic activity to age-related sleep disturbances.
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