New research suggests that persistent insomnia could eventually lead to increased inflammation and mortality risk, Medical News Today reported.

Researchers at the University of Arizona found that people who suffer from persistent insomnia are at greater risk than those who experience intermittent insomnia. Although about 20 percent of adults in the United States are affected by insomnia, only half (10 percent) suffer from persistent (or chronic) insomnia.

"We hypothesized that insomnia that was persistent over eight years, rather than intermittent insomnia, was associated with death independent of the effects of sedatives, opportunity for sleep (to distinguish it from sleep deprivation), and other confounding factors in a representative sample of the general adult community," Sairam Parthasarathy, lead investigator of the study, said in a statement. "An enhanced understanding of the association between persistence of insomnia and death would inform treatment of the 'at-risk' population."

For the study, researchers assessed the persistence of insomnia complaints in 1409 adult participants from the Tucson Epidemiological Study of Airway Obstructive Disease (TESAOD). The study commenced in 1972 with multiple follow-up surveys to 1996 and continuous mortality follow-up data to 2011 for a total of 38 years. Blood was collected and serum samples cryopreserved at baseline in 1972 and subsequently at multiple time points. Questions about sleep and related habits were inserted in the two surveys completed between 1984 and 1985 and between 1990 and 1992. The persistence of insomnia was assessed based upon whether insomnia was present in both the 1984-1985 and 1990-1992 surveys (persistent insomnia), in either but not both (intermittent insomnia), or in neither of the two surveys (never insomnia).

They found that after adjusting for various confounders such as age, sex, body weight, smoking, hypnotics, and physical activity, subjects with persistent insomnia were 58 percent more likely to die during the study than subjects with no insomnia and that mortality was cardiovascular- rather than cancer-related.

Although subjects with intermittent insomnia appeared to be more likely to die than no-insomnia subjects, further adjustments for various confounders such as body mass index, smoking status, and regular physical activity, as well as other confounding factors, eliminated this excess risk due to intermittent insomnia.

The findings are detailed in The American Journal of Medicine.