Sleep disturbances and change in multiple cognitive domains among older adults: a multicenter study of five Nordic cohorts.

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Sleep Pub Date : 2024-03-11 DOI:10.1093/sleep/zsad244
Marieclaire Overton, Johan Skoog, Erika J Laukka, Timothy Hadarsson Bodin, Alexander Darin Mattsson, Linnea Sjöberg, Scott M Hofer, Lena Johansson, Jenni Kulmala, Miia Kivipelto, Alina Solomon, Ingmar Skoog, Ingemar Kåreholt, Shireen Sindi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Study objectives: We examined and compared cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between self-reported sleep disturbances and various cognitive domains in five separate Nordic European longitudinal aging studies (baseline N = 5631, mean age = 77.7, mean follow-up = 4.16 years).

Methods: Comparable sleep parameters across studies included reduced sleep duration/quality, insomnia symptoms (sleep latency, waking up at night, and early awakenings), short and long sleep duration, and daytime napping. The cognitive domains were episodic memory, verbal fluency, perceptual speed, executive functioning, and global cognition (aggregated measure). A series of mixed linear models were run separately in each study and then compared to assess the level and rate of change in cognitive functioning across each sleep disturbance parameter. Models were adjusted for age, sex, education, hypnotic usage, depressive symptoms, lifestyle factors, cardiovascular, and metabolic conditions. By using a coordinated analytic approach, comparable construct-level measurements were generated, and results from identical statistical models were qualitatively compared across studies.

Results: While the pattern of statistically significant results varied across studies, subjective sleep disturbances were consistently associated with worse cognition and steeper cognitive decline. Insomnia symptoms were associated with poorer episodic memory and participants sleeping less or more than 7-8 hours had a steeper decline in perceptual speed. In addition, daytime napping (>2 hours) was cross-sectionally and longitudinally associated with all examined cognitive domains. Most observed associations were study-specific (except for daytime napping), and a majority of association estimates remained significant after adjusting for covariates.

Conclusion: This rigorous multicenter investigation further supports the importance of sleep disturbance, including insomnia, long and short sleep duration, and daytime napping on baseline cognitive functioning and rate of change among older adults. These sleep factors may be targeted in future lifestyle interventions to reduce cognitive decline.

老年人睡眠障碍与多个认知领域的变化:一项针对五个北欧队列的多中心研究。
研究目标我们在五项独立的北欧老龄化纵向研究(基线人数=5631,平均年龄=77.7,平均随访时间=4.16年)中,检查并比较了自我报告的睡眠障碍与各种认知领域之间的横向和纵向关联:各项研究中可比的睡眠参数包括睡眠时间缩短/质量下降、失眠症状(睡眠潜伏期、夜间醒来和早醒)、睡眠时间长短和白天打盹。认知领域包括外显记忆、语言流畅性、感知速度、执行功能和整体认知(综合测量)。在每项研究中分别运行一系列混合线性模型,然后进行比较,以评估认知功能在不同睡眠障碍参数下的变化水平和速度。模型对年龄、性别、教育程度、催眠药使用情况、抑郁症状、生活方式因素、心血管和代谢状况进行了调整。通过使用协调分析方法,产生了可比较的结构水平测量结果,并对不同研究中相同统计模型的结果进行了定性比较:结果:虽然不同研究得出的具有统计学意义的结果模式各不相同,但主观睡眠障碍始终与认知能力下降和认知能力急剧下降相关。失眠症状与较差的外显记忆有关,睡眠时间少于或超过 7-8 小时的参与者感知速度下降更快。此外,白天小睡(>2 小时)与所有检查的认知领域都有横向和纵向联系。大多数观察到的关联是研究特异性的(白天小睡除外),在调整协变量后,大多数关联估计值仍然显著:这项严谨的多中心调查进一步证实了睡眠障碍(包括失眠、睡眠时间长和短以及白天小睡)对老年人基线认知功能和变化率的重要性。在未来的生活方式干预中,这些睡眠因素可能会成为减少认知功能下降的目标。
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来源期刊
Sleep
Sleep 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
10.70%
发文量
1134
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: SLEEP® publishes findings from studies conducted at any level of analysis, including: Genes Molecules Cells Physiology Neural systems and circuits Behavior and cognition Self-report SLEEP® publishes articles that use a wide variety of scientific approaches and address a broad range of topics. These may include, but are not limited to: Basic and neuroscience studies of sleep and circadian mechanisms In vitro and animal models of sleep, circadian rhythms, and human disorders Pre-clinical human investigations, including the measurement and manipulation of sleep and circadian rhythms Studies in clinical or population samples. These may address factors influencing sleep and circadian rhythms (e.g., development and aging, and social and environmental influences) and relationships between sleep, circadian rhythms, health, and disease Clinical trials, epidemiology studies, implementation, and dissemination research.
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