Broken sleep heightens Alzheimer's risk
Fragmented sleep can increase one's risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, new research shows, suggesting that improvements in sleep continuity may offer a useful strategy for reducing likelihood of dementia in old age.
"An individual with high sleep fragmentation (90th percentile) had a 1.5-fold risk of developing AD as compared with someone with low sleep fragmentation (10th percentile)," says Dr. Andrew Lim, the lead author of the study and neurologist at Sunnybrook. "Previous research had suggested the possibility that sleep disruption may contribute to cognitive impairment and neurodegeneration, but a link between sleep disruption and the risk of Alzheimer's disease in older adults living in the community had never been shown."
While several studies in the past have reported associations between sleep and cognitive function in older adults, long-term community-based studies linking sleep function in older adults with the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) or the rate of cognitive decline were lacking, partly because standard sleep measurement approaches perturbed natural sleep behavior, were usually limited to a single night of testing, could only be performed in an inpatient settings, and could only be performed on relatively small groups of people because of the expense involved.
With the development of smaller, more portable devices, researchers are now able to obtain objective measures of sleep-wake behavior that are non-intrusive and do not interfere with natural sleep. They can measure rest and activity continuously 24 hours a day for days to weeks, capturing total daily sleep and providing investigators with non-invasive objective measures that overcome many of the limitations of previous investigations.