David Broder/LinkedIn
Dec 25, 2025, 17:29
David Broder Shares A Study Linking Longer Daytime Naps with Stroke
David Broder, Associate Dean at American Osteopathic Association, D’Youville University, shared on X:
”Longer daytime naps are associated with a progressively higher risk for stroke, according to study in Sleep Medicine.
I refuse to lose any sleep over this.”
Researchers performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to evaluate the association between daytime napping and the risk of stroke.
The analysis included 13 quantitative studies involving 15,855 stroke cases and 595,520 control participants, along with 7 additional studies reviewed qualitatively.
Overall, longer daytime napping duration was consistently associated with an increased risk of stroke.
Read the full article here.

Stay updated with Hemostasis Today.
-
Jun 1, 2026, 18:51Francesco Giurazza: New Publication on Glubran-2 in Acute Bleeding Patients with Coagulopathies
-
Jun 1, 2026, 18:50Donald Arnold is the Recipient of the Roberts Award – ISTH
-
Jun 1, 2026, 18:49Amirreza Jabbaripour Sarmadian: My First Paper as Corresponding Author on Upper Extremity DVT Following COVID-19 Vaccination
-
Jun 1, 2026, 18:49James P. Crowley: How Combining Vitamin D analogs with Chemotherapy Impacts Survival Outcomes
-
Jun 1, 2026, 18:42Debojyoti Chakraborty: Small But Meaningful Steps Toward A Gene Editing Trial For Sickle Cell Disease In India
-
Jun 1, 2026, 17:14Tiffany Gacel: What an Incredible Day With NBCA and The Red Bus Tour at Memorial at Gulfport?
-
Jun 1, 2026, 17:12Marie-Claire Kofi: Poster Highlights the Process of Establishing the Sickle Cell Transitions Policy Lab
-
Jun 1, 2026, 17:00Azusa Nagao: Organizing the Symposium on Women and Bleeding Disorders at JSTH Annual Meeting
-
Jun 1, 2026, 16:57Kuljeet Kaur: Approach to Anemia – More Than Just a Low Hemoglobin