The effect of sleep disturbances on the incidence of dementia for varying lag times.

IF 4.3 Q2 BUSINESS
Peter Alders, Almar Kok, Elisabeth M van Zutphen, Jurgen A H R Claassen, Dorly J H Deeg
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Few studies have addressed the association of sleep disturbances with incident dementia with long lag times. We add to this literature by investigating how lag times varying from 2.2 to 23.8 years affect the relationship between sleep disturbance and incident dementia in a Dutch cohort study on aging.

Methods: Using eight waves of data from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam, we investigated the association of hours of sleep, difficulty falling asleep, interrupted sleep, and waking up early with incident dementia. For dementia an algorithm was used based on repeated measurements of cognitive tests and other data sources that provide strong indications of dementia. Sleep disturbances were assessed with a self-report questionnaire.

Results: Of 2,218 participants, 237 (11%) developed dementia in the period 1992/3 to 2015/6. Participants ≥70 years more often reported sleep disturbances compared to those <70. Only for a short lag time (3 years), sleeping ≥9 h was associated with incident dementia. Sleeping ≤6 h, interrupted sleep and waking up early were associated with incident dementia, particularly for lag times ≥15 years.

Discussion: We found that the association of sleep disturbances with incident dementia becomes stronger with longer lag times (particularly ≥15 years). Studies with lag times <15 years may suffer from reverse causation due to the changes in sleep patterns caused by the prodromal phase of neurodegenerative disease. The association of sleeping ≥9 h and the incidence of dementia in analyses with a short lag time seem to be the result of reverse causation.

不同滞后时间内睡眠障碍对痴呆症发病率的影响。
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来源期刊
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The JPAD Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’Disease will publish reviews, original research articles and short reports to improve our knowledge in the field of Alzheimer prevention including: neurosciences, biomarkers, imaging, epidemiology, public health, physical cognitive exercise, nutrition, risk and protective factors, drug development, trials design, and heath economic outcomes.JPAD will publish also the meeting abstracts from Clinical Trial on Alzheimer Disease (CTAD) and will be distributed both in paper and online version worldwide.We hope that JPAD with your contribution will play a role in the development of Alzheimer prevention.
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