Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Objectives
Poor sleep is associated with multiple age-related neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric conditions. The hippocampus plays a special role in sleep and sleep-dependent cognition, and accelerated hippocampal atrophy is typically seen with higher age. Hence, it is critical to establish how the relationship between sleep and hippocampal volume loss unfolds across the adult lifespan.Methods
Self-reported sleep measures and MRI-derived hippocampal volumes were obtained from 3105 cognitively normal participants (18-90 years) from major European brain studies in the Lifebrain consortium. Hippocampal volume change was estimated from 5116 MRIs from 1299 participants for whom longitudinal MRIs were available, followed up to 11 years with a mean interval of 3.3 years. Cross-sectional analyses were repeated in a sample of 21,390 participants from the UK Biobank.Results
No cross-sectional sleep-hippocampal volume relationships were found. However, worse sleep quality, efficiency, problems, and daytime tiredness were related to greater hippocampal volume loss over time, with high scorers showing 0.22% greater annual loss than low scorers. The relationship between sleep and hippocampal atrophy did not vary across age. Simulations showed that the observed longitudinal effects were too small to be detected as age-interactions in the cross-sectional analyses.Conclusions
Worse self-reported sleep is associated with higher rates of hippocampal volume decline across the adult lifespan. This suggests that sleep is relevant to understand individual differences in hippocampal atrophy, but limited effect sizes call for cautious interpretation.
SUBMITTER: Fjell AM
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7215271 | biostudies-literature | 2020 May
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Fjell Anders M AM Sørensen Øystein Ø Amlien Inge K IK Bartrés-Faz David D Bros Didac Maciá DM Buchmann Nikolaus N Demuth Ilja I Drevon Christian A CA Düzel Sandra S Ebmeier Klaus P KP Idland Ane-Victoria AV Kietzmann Tim C TC Kievit Rogier R Kühn Simone S Lindenberger Ulman U Mowinckel Athanasia M AM Nyberg Lars L Price Darren D Sexton Claire E CE Solé-Padullés Cristina C Pudas Sara S Sederevicius Donatas D Suri Sana S Wagner Gerd G Watne Leiv Otto LO Westerhausen René R Zsoldos Enikő E Walhovd Kristine B KB
Sleep 20200501 5
<h4>Objectives</h4>Poor sleep is associated with multiple age-related neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric conditions. The hippocampus plays a special role in sleep and sleep-dependent cognition, and accelerated hippocampal atrophy is typically seen with higher age. Hence, it is critical to establish how the relationship between sleep and hippocampal volume loss unfolds across the adult lifespan.<h4>Methods</h4>Self-reported sleep measures and MRI-derived hippocampal volumes were obtained from ...[more]