Ramos Alberto R, Alperin Noam, Lee Sang, Gonzalez Kevin A, Tarraf Wassim, Hernandez-Cardenache Rene
Department of Neurology, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Department of Radiology, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, FL 33136, USA.
Appl Sci (Basel). 2021 Jun 2;11(12). doi: 10.3390/app11125314. Epub 2021 Jun 8.
We aim to determine the sleep correlates of age-related brain loss in a sample of middle-aged to older males with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). We recruited consecutive treatment naïve male patients with moderate to severe OSA from January to November of 2019. We excluded participants if they had dementia, stroke or heart disease. We collected demographic variables and vascular risk factors. We also obtained the insomnia severity index, the Epworth sleepiness scale and the Pittsburgh sleep quality index. We also obtained computerized neurocognitive testing with the go-no-go response inhibition test, Stroop interference test, catch game test, staged information processing speed test, verbal memory test and non-verbal memory test. We derived age and education adjusted domain-specific -scores for global cognition, memory, attention, processing speed and executive function. We used brain MRI T1-weighted images to derive total hippocampal and gray matter volumes. Partial correlations evaluated associations between variables from sleep questionnaires (e.g., insomnia severity index score), and polysomnographic variables (the apnea-hypopnea index, average oxygen levels during sleep) with cognitive domains and brain volumes. We examined 16 participants with an age range of 40-76 years, 73% Hispanic/Latino. The mean apnea-hypopnea index was 48.9 ± 25.5 and average oxygen saturation during sleep was 91.4% ± 6.9%. Hypertension was seen in 66% and diabetes mellitus in 27%. We found that the insomnia severity index score and average oxygen levels during sleep had the strongest correlations with brain volumes and cognition. These preliminary findings may aid in developing future strategies to improve age-related brain loss in patients with OSA.
我们旨在确定中年至老年阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)男性样本中与年龄相关的脑容量减少的睡眠相关因素。我们在2019年1月至11月连续招募了未经治疗的中度至重度OSA男性患者。如果参与者患有痴呆症、中风或心脏病,我们将其排除在外。我们收集了人口统计学变量和血管危险因素。我们还获得了失眠严重程度指数、爱泼华嗜睡量表和匹兹堡睡眠质量指数。我们还进行了计算机化神经认知测试,包括停止信号反应抑制测试、斯特鲁普干扰测试、捕捉游戏测试、分阶段信息处理速度测试、言语记忆测试和非言语记忆测试。我们得出了针对全球认知、记忆、注意力、处理速度和执行功能的年龄和教育程度调整后的特定领域分数。我们使用脑部MRI T1加权图像得出海马体和灰质的总体积。偏相关性评估了睡眠问卷变量(如失眠严重程度指数得分)和多导睡眠图变量(呼吸暂停低通气指数、睡眠期间平均氧水平)与认知领域和脑容量之间的关联。我们研究了16名年龄在40 - 76岁之间的参与者,其中73%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔。平均呼吸暂停低通气指数为48.9±25.5,睡眠期间平均氧饱和度为91.4%±6.9%。66%的参与者患有高血压,27%患有糖尿病。我们发现失眠严重程度指数得分和睡眠期间平均氧水平与脑容量和认知的相关性最强。这些初步发现可能有助于制定未来策略,以改善OSA患者与年龄相关的脑容量减少情况。