Longer sleep duration and neuroinflammation in at-risk elderly with a parental history of Alzheimer’s disease
Author:
Baril Andrée-Ann12, Picard Cynthia3ORCID, Labonté Anne3, Sanchez Erlan4, Duclos Catherine15, Mohammediyan Béry3, Breitner John C S3, Villeneuve Sylvia3, Poirier Judes3, , Villeneuve Sylvia, Chakravarty Mallar, Spreng Nathan, Bohbot Véronique, Collins Louis, Evans Alan, Hoge Rick, Near Jamie, Rajah Natasha, Soucy Jean-Paul, Baillet Sylvain, Poirier Judes, Auld Daniel, Multhaup Gerhard, Cuello Claudio, Morgan David G, Arbour Nathalie, Breitner John, Geddes Maiya, Ducharme Simon, Baril Andrée-Ann, Rosa-Neto Pedro, Das Samir, Madjar Cécile, Kat Justin, Tremblay-Mercier Jennifer, Dyke Stephanie, Iturria Medina Yasser, Leoutsakos Jeannie-Marie, Blennow Kaj, Zetterberg Henrik, Mielke Michelle M, Ossenkoppele Rik, Amouyel Philippe, Labonté Anne, Picard Cynthia, Tardif Christine, Münter Lisa-Marie, Orban Pierre, Fonov Vladimir, Newbold Holly, Dadar Masha, Meyer Pierre-François, Tullo Stéphanie, Vachon-Presseau Étienne
Affiliation:
1. Center for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, CIUSSS-NIM , Montréal , QC , Canada 2. Department of Medicine, Université de Montréal , Montréal, QC , Canada 3. Center for Studies on Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease, Douglas Mental Health University Institute, McGill University , Montreal, QC , Canada 4. Sunnybrook Research Institute, University of Toronto , Toronto , ON , Canada 5. Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Université de Montréal , Montréal, QC , Canada
Abstract
Abstract
Study Objectives
Although short sleep could promote neurodegeneration, long sleep may be a marker of ongoing neurodegeneration, potentially as a result of neuroinflammation. The objective was to evaluate sleep patterns with age of expected Alzheimer’s disease (AD) onset and neuroinflammation.
Methods
We tested 203 dementia-free participants (68.5 ± 5.4 years old, 78M). The PREVENT-AD cohort includes older persons with a parental history of AD whose age was nearing their expected AD onset. We estimated expected years to AD onset by subtracting the participants’ age from their parent’s at AD dementia onset. We extracted actigraphy sleep variables of interest (times of sleep onset and morning awakening, time in bed, sleep efficiency, and sleep duration) and general profiles (sleep fragmentation, phase delay, and hypersomnia). Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) inflammatory biomarkers were assessed with OLINK multiplex technology.
Results
Proximity to, or exceeding, expected age of onset was associated with a sleep profile suggestive of hypersomnia (longer sleep and later morning awakening time). This hypersomnia sleep profile was associated with higher CSF neuroinflammatory biomarkers (IL-6, MCP-1, and global score). Interaction analyses revealed that some of these sleep-neuroinflammation associations were present mostly in those closer/exceeding the age of expected AD onset, APOE4 carriers, and those with better memory performance.
Conclusions
Proximity to, or exceeding, parental AD dementia onset was associated with a longer sleep pattern, which was related to elevated proinflammatory CSF biomarkers. We speculate that longer sleep may serve a compensatory purpose potentially triggered by neuroinflammation as individuals are approaching AD onset. Further studies should investigate whether neuroinflammatory-triggered long sleep duration could mitigate cognitive deficits.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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