Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS2 8DZ, UK.
Bristol Brain Centre, North Bristol NHS Trust, Bristol, BS10 5NB, UK.
BMC Geriatr. 2023 Sep 23;23(1):590. doi: 10.1186/s12877-023-04288-0.
Sleep and circadian rhythm disorders are well recognised in both AD (Alzheimer's Disease) dementia and MCI-AD (Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Alzheimer's Disease). Such abnormalities include insomnia, excessive daytime sleepiness, decreased sleep efficiency, increased sleep fragmentation and sundowning. Enhancing understanding of sleep abnormalities may unveil targets for intervention in sleep, a promising approach given hypotheses that sleep disorders may exacerbate AD pathological progression and represent a contributory factor toward impaired cognitive performance and worse quality of life. This may also permit early diagnosis of AD pathology, widely acknowledged as a pre-requisite for future disease-modifying therapies. This study aims to bridge the divide between in-laboratory polysomnographic studies which allow for rich characterisation of sleep but in an unnatural setting, and naturalistic studies typically approximating sleep through use of non-EEG wearable devices. It is also designed to record sleep patterns over a 2 month duration sufficient to capture both infradian rhythm and compensatory responses following suboptimal sleep. Finally, it harnesses an extensively phenotyped population including with AD blood biomarkers. Its principal aims are to improve characterisation of sleep and biological rhythms in individuals with AD, particularly focusing on micro-architectural measures of sleep, compensatory responses to suboptimal sleep and the relationship between sleep parameters, biological rhythms and cognitive performance.
METHODS/DESIGN: This observational cohort study has two arms (AD-MCI / mild AD dementia and aged-matched healthy adults). Each participant undergoes a baseline visit for collection of demographic, physiological and neuropsychological information utilising validated questionnaires. The main study period involves 7 nights of home-based multi-channel EEG sleep recording nested within an 8-week study period involving continuous wrist-worn actigraphy, sleep diaries and regular brief cognitive tests. Measurement of sleep parameters will be at home thereby obtaining a real-world, naturalistic dataset. Cognitive testing will be repeated at 6 months to stratify participants by longitudinal disease progression.
This study will generate new insights particularly in micro-architectural measures of sleep, circadian patterns and compensatory sleep responses in a population with and without AD neurodegenerative change. It aims to enhance standards of remotely based sleep research through use of a well-phenotyped population and advanced sleep measurement technology.
睡眠和昼夜节律紊乱在 AD(阿尔茨海默病)痴呆和 MCI-AD(由阿尔茨海默病引起的轻度认知障碍)中都得到了很好的认识。这些异常包括失眠、白天过度嗜睡、睡眠效率降低、睡眠碎片化增加和日落综合征。加强对睡眠异常的理解可能会发现睡眠干预的靶点,这是一种很有前途的方法,因为有假说认为睡眠障碍可能会加剧 AD 病理进展,并成为认知表现下降和生活质量恶化的一个促成因素。这也可能允许对 AD 病理进行早期诊断,这被广泛认为是未来疾病修饰治疗的前提。本研究旨在弥合实验室多导睡眠图研究与自然睡眠研究之间的差距,实验室多导睡眠图研究允许对睡眠进行丰富的描述,但在不自然的环境中进行,而自然睡眠研究通常通过使用非 EEG 可穿戴设备来模拟睡眠。它还旨在记录 2 个月的睡眠模式,以捕捉亚最佳睡眠后的 infradian 节律和补偿反应。最后,它利用了一个经过广泛表型分析的人群,包括 AD 血液生物标志物。其主要目的是改善 AD 个体的睡眠和生物节律特征,特别是侧重于睡眠的微观结构测量、对亚最佳睡眠的补偿反应以及睡眠参数、生物节律和认知表现之间的关系。
方法/设计:这项观察性队列研究有两个部分(AD-MCI/轻度 AD 痴呆和年龄匹配的健康成年人)。每个参与者在基线访视时接受人口统计学、生理学和神经心理学信息的收集,利用经过验证的问卷。主要研究期包括 7 晚的家庭多通道 EEG 睡眠记录,嵌套在 8 周的研究期内,包括连续的腕戴活动记录仪、睡眠日记和定期的简短认知测试。在家中测量睡眠参数,从而获得真实世界的自然数据集。认知测试将在 6 个月时重复进行,以根据纵向疾病进展对参与者进行分层。
这项研究将在有和没有 AD 神经退行性变化的人群中产生新的见解,特别是在睡眠的微观结构测量、昼夜节律模式和补偿性睡眠反应方面。它旨在通过使用表型良好的人群和先进的睡眠测量技术,提高远程睡眠研究的标准。