BARROW Neurological Institute at Phoenix Children's Hospital, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Department of Child Health, University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
J Neurosci Res. 2021 Apr;99(4):1136-1160. doi: 10.1002/jnr.24771. Epub 2020 Dec 14.
Elderly populations (≥65 years old) have the highest risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) and/or obtaining a traumatic brain injury (TBI). Using translational mouse models, we investigated sleep disturbances and inflammation associated with normal aging, TBI and aging, and AD. We hypothesized that aging results in marked changes in sleep compared with adult mice, and that TBI and aging would result in sleep and inflammation levels similar to AD mice. We used female 16-month-old wild-type (WT Aged) and 3xTg-AD mice, as well as a 2-month-old reference group (WT Adult), to evaluate sleep changes. WT Aged mice received diffuse TBI by midline fluid percussion, and blood was collected from both WT Aged (pre- and post-TBI) and 3xTg-AD mice to evaluate inflammation. Cognitive behavior was tested, and tissue was collected for histology. Bayesian generalized additive and mixed-effects models were used for analyses. Both normal aging and AD led to increases in sleep compared with adult mice. WT Aged mice with TBI slept substantially more, with fragmented shorter bouts, than they did pre-TBI and compared with AD mice. However, differences between WT Aged and 3xTg-AD mice in immune cell populations and plasma cytokine levels were incongruous, cognitive deficits were similar, and cumulative sleep was not predictive of inflammation or behavior for either group. Our results suggest that in similarly aged individuals, TBI immediately induces more profound sleep alterations than in AD, although both diseases likely include cognitive impairments. Unique pathological sleep pathways may exist in elderly individuals who incur TBI compared with similarly aged individuals who have AD, which may warrant disease-specific treatments in clinical settings.
老年人群体(≥65 岁)患阿尔茨海默病(AD)和/或创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的风险最高。我们使用转化性小鼠模型研究了与正常衰老、TBI 和衰老以及 AD 相关的睡眠障碍和炎症。我们假设与成年小鼠相比,衰老会导致睡眠发生明显变化,并且 TBI 和衰老会导致与 AD 小鼠相似的睡眠和炎症水平。我们使用雌性 16 个月大的野生型(WT 老年)和 3xTg-AD 小鼠,以及 2 个月大的参考组(WT 成年)来评估睡眠变化。WT 老年小鼠通过中线液压冲击接受弥漫性 TBI,并且从 WT 老年(TBI 前后)和 3xTg-AD 小鼠采集血液以评估炎症。进行认知行为测试,并采集组织进行组织学检查。使用贝叶斯广义加性和混合效应模型进行分析。与成年小鼠相比,正常衰老和 AD 都会导致睡眠增加。与 TBI 前相比,WT 老年小鼠的睡眠量明显增加,且睡眠片段更短。然而,WT 老年和 3xTg-AD 小鼠之间免疫细胞群和血浆细胞因子水平的差异不一致,认知缺陷相似,累积睡眠对两组的炎症或行为均无预测作用。我们的结果表明,在年龄相似的个体中,TBI 立即引起的睡眠改变比 AD 更为明显,尽管两种疾病都可能包括认知障碍。与年龄相似的患有 AD 的个体相比,患有 TBI 的老年个体中可能存在独特的病理性睡眠途径,这可能需要在临床环境中进行针对特定疾病的治疗。