The researchers from the New York University found that an average
sleep of seven to eight hours and vigorous leisurely activity or
exercise of 30 to 60 minutes three to six times per week, are healthy
behaviours that can significantly decreased adults' stroke risk.
But sleeping for a longer or shorter amount of time increased the risk people would suffer, they said.
The
result showed that average sleepers -- those who slept seven to eight
hours a night -- were 25 percent less likely to have experienced a
stroke.
Meanwhile long sleepers -- those who
got more than eight hours a night -- were 146 percent more likely to
have suffered a stroke.
And short sleepers, who slept less than seven hours a night, were 22 percent more likely to report having had a stroke.
Average
sleep and vigorous leisurely activity three to six times per week
significantly decreased stroke risk, the researchers elucidated.
Researchers
used a computerised analysis of health, lifestyle, demographic and
other factors in 288,888 adults who were 77 percent white and nearly
half 45 or older who participated in a survey from 2004 to 2013.
They
examined how long, average and short sleep durations and physical
activity, such as walking, swimming, bicycling, gardening and more,
impact stroke risk.
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