Afsara B. Zaheed, Amanda L. Tapia, Nina Oryshkewych, Bradley J. Wheeler, Meryl A. Butters, Daniel J. Buysse, Yue Leng, Lisa L. Barnes, Andrew Lim, Lan Yu, Adriane M. Soehner, Meredith L. Wallace
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Comparing sleep and rest–activity rhythms across different cognitive aging pathways can identify novel risk factors and potential mechanisms. However, our current understanding is restricted by differences in sleep measurement, limited longitudinal data, and heterogeneous cognitive aging processes.
METHODS
We applied cubic splines to longitudinal self-reported sleep and actigraphy data from 1449 participants in the Rush Memory and Aging Project and quantified differences in the levels and trajectories of sleep amount, regularity, and timing within and between three cognitive aging pathways: normal, stable mild cognitive impairment, dementia.
RESULTS
Sleep amount was lowest in the dementia pathway prior to cognitive impairment but increased with age, most rapidly after dementia. Regularity declined across all pathways, most rapidly after cognitive diagnoses. Timing advanced across all pathways.
DISCUSSION
Shorter sleep amount in cognitively healthy older adults may be a risk factor or prodromal indicator of dementia, while longer sleep amounts and decreasing regularity may reflect neurodegeneration.
Highlights
We quantified longitudinal changes in sleep across three cognitive-aging pathways.
We incorporated both subjective and objective measures of sleep health.
Self-report duration increased noticeably from before to after cognitive diagnosis.
Sleep irregularity increased most prominently after cognitive diagnosis.
Advances in sleep timing occurred in both normal and pathological aging.
期刊介绍:
Alzheimer's & Dementia is a peer-reviewed journal that aims to bridge knowledge gaps in dementia research by covering the entire spectrum, from basic science to clinical trials to social and behavioral investigations. It provides a platform for rapid communication of new findings and ideas, optimal translation of research into practical applications, increasing knowledge across diverse disciplines for early detection, diagnosis, and intervention, and identifying promising new research directions. In July 2008, Alzheimer's & Dementia was accepted for indexing by MEDLINE, recognizing its scientific merit and contribution to Alzheimer's research.