The complex interplay between sleep and neurodegenerative diseases: An epidemiological view.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Melanie Bergmann, Lena Tschiderer, Lisa Seekircher, Joan Santamaria, Federica Provini
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Abstract

Background: Sleep disorders and neurodegeneration (NDG) are mutually related but the nature of this relationship is unclear. We aimed to better understand the relationship between sleep and neurodegenerative disease by performing a critical review of epidemiological studies that investigated the association of sleep disorders and the subsequent development of Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), or general dementia.

Methods: We searched for all case-control or prospective cohort studies published in PubMed until August 8 2024 evaluating a series of sleep features and subsequent development of AD, PD, or general dementia over certain observation periods. Patient data, sleep features, and outcome data related to PD, AD, and general dementia were extracted following the PRISMA guidelines. Relative risks for the different NDG diseases were extracted. Study quality was assessed with the Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment scale.

Results: Of 1,139 identified articles 52 were selected from 30 independent studies (29 cohort and one case-control study), including >2.9 million individuals with follow-up periods ranging from three to 40 years. The included articles reported on 18,765 AD outcomes, 14,312 PD outcomes, and 100,453 dementia outcomes. Forty-five articles were classified as having a high-quality. Despite that, there was a great variability in the main aim of the studies, the sleep features evaluated, the diagnostic system employed or the duration of the follow-ups. Only twelve studies assessed sleep with objective measures. The influence of sleep duration and sleep quality, chronotype, and the presence of excessive daytime sleepiness, insomnia, obstructive sleep apnea, snoring, restless legs syndrome showed varying risk ratios or no statistically significant association with PD, AD and dementia over time.

Conclusion: Our systematic review underlines the need for further comprehensive epidemiological studies with homogenous and objective sleep measures to evaluate the different sleep features and understand the relationship between sleep and NDG disease.

睡眠与神经退行性疾病之间复杂的相互作用:流行病学观点。
背景:睡眠障碍和神经变性(NDG)是相互关联的,但这种关系的性质尚不清楚。为了更好地了解睡眠与神经退行性疾病之间的关系,我们对调查睡眠障碍与阿尔茨海默病(AD)、帕金森病(PD)或一般性痴呆的后续发展之间关系的流行病学研究进行了批判性回顾。方法:我们检索了2024年8月8日之前发表在PubMed上的所有病例对照或前瞻性队列研究,这些研究评估了一系列睡眠特征以及在特定观察期内AD、PD或一般性痴呆的后续发展。按照PRISMA指南提取PD、AD和一般性痴呆相关的患者数据、睡眠特征和结局数据。提取不同NDG疾病的相对风险。采用纽卡斯尔-渥太华质量评估量表评估研究质量。结果:在1139篇已确定的文章中,52篇来自30项独立研究(29项队列研究和1项病例对照研究),包括1,290万人,随访期从3年到40年不等。纳入的文章报道了18,765例AD结果,14,312例PD结果和100,453例痴呆结果。45篇文章被归类为高质量。尽管如此,这些研究的主要目的、评估的睡眠特征、采用的诊断系统或随访的持续时间都存在很大的差异。只有12项研究用客观方法评估了睡眠。随着时间的推移,睡眠时间和睡眠质量、睡眠类型以及白天过度嗜睡、失眠、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停、打鼾、不宁腿综合征的存在对PD、AD和痴呆的影响表现出不同的风险比或无统计学意义的相关性。结论:我们的系统综述强调需要进一步进行全面的流行病学研究,采用均匀和客观的睡眠测量来评估不同的睡眠特征,并了解睡眠与NDG疾病之间的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuroepidemiology
Neuroepidemiology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
1.80%
发文量
49
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Neuroepidemiology'' is the only internationally recognised peer-reviewed periodical devoted to descriptive, analytical and experimental studies in the epidemiology of neurologic disease. The scope of the journal expands the boundaries of traditional clinical neurology by providing new insights regarding the etiology, determinants, distribution, management and prevention of diseases of the nervous system.
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