Pace-Schott Edward F, Spencer Rebecca M C
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA,
Curr Top Behav Neurosci. 2015;25:307-30. doi: 10.1007/7854_2014_300.
Sleep quality and architecture as well as sleep's homeostatic and circadian controls change with healthy aging. Changes include reductions in slow-wave sleep's (SWS) percent and spectral power in the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG), number and amplitude of sleep spindles, rapid eye movement (REM) density and the amplitude of circadian rhythms, as well as a phase advance (moved earlier in time) of the brain's circadian clock. With mild cognitive impairment (MCI) there are further reductions of sleep quality, SWS, spindles, and percent REM, all of which further diminish, along with a profound disruption of circadian rhythmicity, with the conversion to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Sleep disorders may represent risk factors for dementias (e.g., REM Behavior Disorder presages Parkinson's disease) and sleep disorders are themselves extremely prevalent in neurodegenerative diseases. Working memory , formation of new episodic memories, and processing speed all decline with healthy aging whereas semantic, recognition, and emotional declarative memory are spared. In MCI, episodic and working memory further decline along with declines in semantic memory. In young adults, sleep-dependent memory consolidation (SDC) is widely observed for both declarative and procedural memory tasks. However, with healthy aging, although SDC for declarative memory is preserved, certain procedural tasks, such as motor-sequence learning, do not show SDC. In younger adults, fragmentation of sleep can reduce SDC, and a normative increase in sleep fragmentation may account for reduced SDC with healthy aging. Whereas sleep disorders such as insomnia, obstructive sleep apnea, and narcolepsy can impair SDC in the absence of neurodegenerative changes, the incidence of sleep disorders increases both with normal aging and, further, with neurodegenerative disease. Specific features of sleep architecture, such as sleep spindles and SWS are strongly linked to SDC. Diminution of these features with healthy aging and their further decline with MCI may account for concomitant declines in SDC. Notably these same sleep features further markedly decline, in concert with declining cognitive function, with the progression to AD. Therefore, progressive changes in sleep quality, architecture, and neural regulation may constitute a contributing factor to cognitive decline that is seen both with healthy aging and, to a much greater extent, with neurodegenerative disease.
睡眠质量和结构以及睡眠的稳态和昼夜节律控制会随着健康衰老而发生变化。这些变化包括慢波睡眠(SWS)在睡眠脑电图(EEG)中的百分比和频谱功率降低、睡眠纺锤波的数量和振幅降低、快速眼动(REM)密度和昼夜节律的振幅降低,以及大脑昼夜节律时钟的相位提前(时间上提前)。随着轻度认知障碍(MCI)的出现,睡眠质量、慢波睡眠、纺锤波和快速眼动百分比会进一步降低,所有这些都会随着向阿尔茨海默病(AD)的转变而进一步减少,同时昼夜节律会受到严重破坏。睡眠障碍可能是痴呆症的危险因素(例如,快速眼动行为障碍预示着帕金森病),并且睡眠障碍本身在神经退行性疾病中极为普遍。随着健康衰老,工作记忆、新情景记忆的形成和处理速度都会下降,而语义记忆、识别记忆和情感陈述性记忆则不受影响。在MCI中,情景记忆和工作记忆会进一步下降,同时语义记忆也会下降。在年轻人中,对于陈述性和程序性记忆任务,广泛观察到睡眠依赖性记忆巩固(SDC)。然而,随着健康衰老,虽然陈述性记忆的SDC得以保留,但某些程序性任务,如运动序列学习,并未表现出SDC。在年轻人中,睡眠碎片化会降低SDC,而睡眠碎片化的正常增加可能解释了随着健康衰老SDC的降低。虽然失眠、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停和发作性睡病等睡眠障碍在没有神经退行性变化的情况下会损害SDC,但睡眠障碍的发生率随着正常衰老以及进一步随着神经退行性疾病而增加。睡眠结构的特定特征,如睡眠纺锤波和慢波睡眠与SDC密切相关。随着健康衰老这些特征的减少以及随着MCI它们的进一步下降可能解释了SDC的相应下降。值得注意的是,随着向AD的进展,这些相同的睡眠特征会随着认知功能的下降而进一步明显下降。因此,睡眠质量、结构和神经调节的渐进性变化可能是导致认知下降的一个因素,这在健康衰老以及在更大程度上在神经退行性疾病中都可以看到。