Skip to main content
Download PDF
- Main
Association of Sleep Duration and Change Over Time With Imaging Biomarkers of Cerebrovascular, Amyloid, Tau, and Neurodegenerative Pathology
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.0000000000207807Abstract
Background and objectives
Both short and long sleep duration were previously associated with incident dementia, but underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We evaluated how self-reported sleep duration and its change over time associate with (A)myloid, (T)au, (N)eurodegeneration, and (V)ascular neuroimaging markers of Alzheimer disease.Methods
Two Framingham Heart Study overlapping samples were studied: participants who underwent 11C-Pittsburg Compound B amyloid and 18F-flortaucipir tau PET imaging and participants who underwent an MRI. MRI metrics estimated neurodegeneration (total brain volume) and cerebrovascular injuries (white matter hyperintensities [WMHs] volume, covert brain infarcts, free-water [FW] fraction). Self-reported sleep duration was assessed and split into categories both at the time of neuroimaging testing and approximately 13 years before: short ≤6 hours. average 7-8 hours, and long ≥9 hours. Logistic and linear regression models were used to examine sleep duration and neuroimaging metrics.Results
The tested cohort was composed of 271 participants (age 53.6 ± 8.0 years; 51% male) in the PET imaging sample and 2,165 participants (age 61.3 ± 11.1 years; 45% male) in the MRI sample. No fully adjusted association was observed between cross-sectional sleep duration and neuroimaging metrics. In fully adjusted models compared with consistently sleeping 7-8 hours, groups transitioning to a longer sleep duration category over time had higher FW fraction (short to average β [SE] 0.0062 [0.0024], p = 0.009; short to long β [SE] 0.0164 [0.0076], p = 0.031; average to long β [SE] 0.0083 [0.0022], p = 0.002), and those specifically going from average to long sleep duration also had higher WMH burden (β [SE] 0.29 [0.11], p = 0.007). The opposite associations (lower WMH and FW) were observed in participants consistently sleeping ≥9 hours as compared with people consistently sleeping 7-8 hours in fully adjusted models (β [SE] -0.43 [0.20], p = 0.028; β [SE] -0.019 [0.004], p = 0.020). Each hour of increasing sleep (continuous, β [SE] 0.12 [0.04], p = 0.003; β [SE] 0.002 [0.001], p = 0.021) and extensive increase in sleep duration (≥2 hours vs 0 ± 1 hour change; β [SE] 0.24 [0.10], p = 0.019; β [SE] 0.0081 [0.0025], p = 0.001) over time was associated with higher WMH burden and FW fraction in fully adjusted models. Sleep duration change was not associated with PET amyloid or tau outcomes.Discussion
Longer self-reported sleep duration over time was associated with neuroimaging biomarkers of cerebrovascular pathology as evidenced by higher WMH burden and FW fraction. A longer sleep duration extending over time may be an early change in the neurodegenerative trajectory.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
File name:
-
File size:
-
Title:
-
Author:
-
Subject:
-
Keywords:
-
Creation Date:
-
Modification Date:
-
Creator:
-
PDF Producer:
-
PDF Version:
-
Page Count:
-
Page Size:
-
Fast Web View:
-
Preparing document for printing…
0%