WAKE UP!
By BRIGHAM AND WOMEN'S HOSPITAL
In a study of older adults, longer, more frequent daytime napping in a specific year predicted worse cognitive performance in the following year, and vice versa.
Daytime napping is common among older adults. The longitudinal relationship between daytime napping and cognitive aging, however, is unknown. A new cohort study by investigators from Brigham and Women’s Hospital found a bidirectional link between the two: excessive daytime napping predicted an increased future risk of Alzheimer’s dementia, and a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s dementia sped up the increase in daytime napping during aging.
The team’s results are published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s
Association.
“Daytime sleep behaviors of older adults are oftentimes ignored, and a consensus for daytime napping in clinical practice and health care is still lacking,” said Peng Li, PhD, of the Medical Biodynamics Program in the Brigham’s Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders.
“Our results not only
suggest that excessive daytime napping may signal an elevated risk of
Alzheimer’s dementia, but they also show that faster yearly increase in daytime
napping may be a sign of deteriorating or unfavored clinical progression of the
disease. Our study calls for a closer attention to 24-hour sleep patterns — not
only nighttime sleep but also daytime sleep — for health monitoring in older
adults.”
There are conflicting results regarding the effects of daytime
napping on cognition in older adults. Whereas some studies have shown that
daytime napping has benefits on acute cognitive performance, mood, and
alertness, other studies have highlighted the adverse outcomes on cognitive
performance. Nevertheless, researchers at the Brigham recognized that all prior
studies on Alzheimer’s disease assessed napping within a participant only once,
and most of them were subjective and questionnaire based. Therefore, they
sought to conduct a longitudinal, objective assessment of naps to determine the
link between daytime napping and Alzheimer’s dementia.
The current study tested two hypotheses: (1) Participants nap
longer and/or more frequently with aging and the changes are even faster with
the progression of Alzheimer’s dementia; and (2) participants with excessive
daytime napping are at an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s dementia.
The study was a collaborative work with Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center and University of California, San Francisco. The team conducted its study using data from the on-going Rush Memory and Aging Project (MAP), a prospective, cohort study. Over 1,000 individuals, with an average age of 81, were provided Actical, a watch-like device, to wear on their non-dominant wrist for up to 14 days.
The team identified sleep episodes using a previously validated
sleep scoring algorithm that considers wrist activity counts. After napping
episodes were identified, the nap duration and frequency were calculated.
Through the novel cohort study, researchers learned that nap duration and nap frequency were positively correlated with age and found a bi-directional, longitudinal relationship between daytime sleep and Alzheimer’s dementia. Independent of known risk factors for dementia, including age and nighttime sleep duration and fragmentation, longer and more frequent daytime naps were a risk factor for developing Alzheimer’s dementia in cognitively normal older men and women.
Besides, annual increases in napping duration and
frequency were accelerated as the disease progressed, especially after the
clinical manifestation of Alzheimer’s dementia. Ultimately, the authors
describe the relationship between daytime napping and cognition to be a
“vicious cycle.”
“The vicious cycle we observed between daytime sleep and
Alzheimer’s disease offers a basis for better understanding the role of sleep
in the development and progression of Alzheimer’s disease in older adults,”
said Li.
The authors acknowledge three primary study limitations. First,
although actigraphy has been widely used in sleep field studies and validated,
researchers recognize that polysomnography is the gold standard for sleep
scoring. Second, the participants studied were older, and, therefore, the
findings may not be easily translated to younger cohorts. Third, future studies
should test whether a direct intervention in daytime napping can lower the risk
of Alzheimer’s dementia or cognitive decline.
“Our hope is to draw more attention to daytime sleep patterns and
the importance of patients noting if their sleep schedule is changing over
time,” said co-senior author Kun Hu, PhD, of the Medical Biodynamics Program in
the Brigham’s Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders. “Sleep changes are
critical in shaping the internal changes in the brain related to the circadian
clocks, cognitive decline and the risk of dementia.”
Reference: “Daytime napping and Alzheimer’s dementia: A potential
bidirectional relationship” by Li, P et al., 17 March 2022, Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s
Association.
DOI: 10.1002/alz.12636
Funding: This work was supported by the NIH (RF1AG064312,
RF1AG059867, R01AG56352, R01AG17917, T32GM007592, and R03AG067985), and the
BrightFocus Foundation Alzheimer’s Research Program (A2020886S).