VA Boston Healthcare System and Harvard Medical School, Dept. of Psychiatry, West Roxbury, MA 02132, USA.
VA Boston Healthcare System and Harvard Medical School, Dept. of Psychiatry, West Roxbury, MA 02132, USA.
Brain Res Bull. 2022 Sep;187:181-198. doi: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2022.07.002. Epub 2022 Jul 15.
Sleep abnormalities are widely reported in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and are linked to cognitive impairments. Sleep abnormalities could be potential biomarkers to detect AD since they are often observed at the preclinical stage. Moreover, sleep could be a target for early intervention to prevent or slow AD progression. Thus, here we review changes in brain oscillations observed during sleep, their connection to AD pathophysiology and the role of specific brain circuits. Slow oscillations (0.1-1 Hz), sleep spindles (8-15 Hz) and their coupling during non-REM sleep are consistently reduced in studies of patients and in AD mouse models although the timing and magnitude of these alterations depends on the pathophysiological changes and the animal model studied. Changes in delta (1-4 Hz) activity are more variable. Animal studies suggest that hippocampal sharp-wave ripples (100-250 Hz) are also affected. Reductions in REM sleep amount and slower oscillations during REM are seen in patients but less consistently in animal models. Thus, changes in a variety of sleep oscillations could impact sleep-dependent memory consolidation or restorative functions of sleep. Recent mechanistic studies suggest that alterations in the activity of GABAergic neurons in the cortex, hippocampus and thalamic reticular nucleus mediate sleep oscillatory changes in AD and represent a potential target for intervention. Longitudinal studies of the timing of AD-related sleep abnormalities with respect to pathology and dysfunction of specific neural networks are needed to identify translationally relevant biomarkers and guide early intervention strategies to prevent or delay AD progression.
睡眠异常在阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者中广泛报道,并与认知障碍有关。睡眠异常可能是检测 AD 的潜在生物标志物,因为它们通常在临床前阶段就被观察到。此外,睡眠可能是早期干预的靶点,以预防或减缓 AD 的进展。因此,我们在这里回顾了睡眠期间观察到的脑电波变化、它们与 AD 病理生理学的联系以及特定脑回路的作用。尽管这些变化的时间和幅度取决于病理生理变化和所研究的动物模型,但在患者和 AD 小鼠模型的研究中,非快速眼动(non-REM)睡眠中的慢波(0.1-1 Hz)、睡眠纺锤波(8-15 Hz)及其耦合均减少。Delta(1-4 Hz)活动的变化则更为多变。动物研究表明,海马区的尖波涟漪(100-250 Hz)也受到影响。患者的 REM 睡眠时间和 REM 期间的慢波减少,但在动物模型中则不那么一致。因此,各种睡眠波的变化可能会影响睡眠依赖性记忆巩固或睡眠的恢复功能。最近的机制研究表明,皮层、海马体和丘脑网状核中 GABA 能神经元活动的改变介导了 AD 中的睡眠振荡变化,代表了干预的潜在靶点。需要对 AD 相关睡眠异常的时间进行纵向研究,以了解特定神经网络的病理和功能,从而确定具有转化意义的生物标志物并指导早期干预策略,以预防或延缓 AD 的进展。