Young Vanessa M, Bernal Rebecca, Baril Andree-Ann, Zeynoun Joy, Wiedner Crystal, Gaona Carlos, Beiser Alexa, Teixeira Antonio L, Salardini Arash, Pase Matthew P, Himali Jayandra Jung, Seshadri Sudha
Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer's & Neurodegenerative Diseases, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, USA.
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, USA.
Alzheimers Dement. 2025 Apr;21(4):e70160. doi: 10.1002/alz.70160.
We investigated whether depression modified the associations between sleep duration and cognitive performance.
We examined the associations between sleep duration and cognition in 1853 dementia-and-stroke-free participants (mean age 49.8 years, [range 27-85]; 42.7% male). Participants were categorized into four groups: no depressive symptoms, no antidepressants; depressive symptoms without antidepressant use; antidepressant use without depressive symptoms; and depressive symptoms and antidepressant use.
Long sleep was associated with reduced overall cognitive function (β ± standard error = -0.25 ± 0.07, p < 0.001), with strongest effects in those with depressive symptoms using (-0.74 ± 0.30, p = 0.017) and not using antidepressants (-0.60 ± 0.26, p = 0.024). Weaker but significant effects were observed in those without depressive symptoms (-0.18 ± 0.09, p = 0.044). No significant associations were observed in participants using antidepressants without depressive symptoms.
Associations between sleep duration and cognitive performance are strongest in individuals with depressive symptoms, regardless of antidepressant use. Future research should elucidate underlying mechanisms and temporal relationships.
Sleeping ≥ 9 hours/night was associated with worse cognitive performance. This association was stronger among those with depression. Long sleepers were more likely to report symptoms of depression. Sleep may be a modifiable risk for cognitive decline in people with depression.
我们研究了抑郁症是否会改变睡眠时间与认知表现之间的关联。
我们在1853名无痴呆和中风的参与者(平均年龄49.8岁,[范围27 - 85岁];42.7%为男性)中研究了睡眠时间与认知之间的关联。参与者被分为四组:无抑郁症状且未使用抗抑郁药;有抑郁症状但未使用抗抑郁药;使用抗抑郁药但无抑郁症状;有抑郁症状且使用抗抑郁药。
睡眠时间长与总体认知功能下降相关(β±标准误 = -0.25±0.07,p < 0.001),在有抑郁症状且使用抗抑郁药的人群中影响最强(-0.74±0.30,p = 0.017),在有抑郁症状但未使用抗抑郁药的人群中影响也较强(-0.60±0.26,p = 0.024)。在无抑郁症状的人群中观察到较弱但显著的影响(-0.18±0.09,p = 0.044)。在使用抗抑郁药但无抑郁症状的参与者中未观察到显著关联。
无论是否使用抗抑郁药,睡眠时间与认知表现之间的关联在有抑郁症状的个体中最强。未来的研究应阐明潜在机制和时间关系。
每晚睡眠≥9小时与较差的认知表现相关。这种关联在抑郁症患者中更强。睡眠时间长的人更有可能报告抑郁症状。睡眠可能是抑郁症患者认知衰退的一个可改变的风险因素。