AI Article Synopsis

  • RBD is a sleep disorder characterized by acting out dreams, usually linked to brainstem dysfunction, but its connection to tauopathies is unclear.
  • The study assessed polysomnography in 11 family members of a kindred with familial tauopathy, finding none exhibited RBD characteristics despite having sufficient REM sleep.
  • Results suggest that nigral degeneration is unlikely the main cause of RBD, showing it is rare in familial tauopathies, emphasizing the need for further research on sleep behavior disorders.

Article Abstract

Background: Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a parasomnia that is manifested by dream enactment behavior. The electrophysiologic substrate for RBD on polysomnography is rapid eye movement sleep without atonia. Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder likely stems from neuronal network dysfunction in the brainstem, although it is not yet clear which specific networks are involved. Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder is often associated with the sporadic synucleinopathies but rarely associated with the sporadic tauopathies. There are no reports on the possible association of rapid eye movement sleep without atonia and RBD with any familial tauopathy.

Objective: To characterize the clinical sleep and polysomnography features in a kindred with a familial tauopathy.

Methods: We performed standard polysomnography in 11 members of the pallidopontonigral degeneration kindred irrespective of any sleep-related complaints. Neuropathologic findings were analyzed in those who subsequently underwent autopsy.

Results: Six affected and 5 genealogically at-risk family members were studied. None of the 11 had a history of dream enactment behavior. Nine of the 11 members attained sufficient rapid eye movement sleep on polysomnography, and the electrophysiologic features of rapid eye movement sleep without atonia and behavioral manifestations of RBD were absent in all subjects. Neuropathologic examination of 4 affected individuals revealed marked nigral degeneration in 3 along with mild degenerative changes in the locus coeruleus, pontine nuclei and tegmentum, and medullary tegmentum.

Conclusions: These findings argue against nigral degeneration being the primary cause of RBD. The absence of the historical, electrophysiologic, and behavioral manifestations of RBD in this kindred provides further evidence that RBD is rare in the sporadic and familial tauopathies. The difference in frequencies of RBD associated with the synucleinopathies compared with the tauopathies suggests differences in the selective vulnerability of brainstem circuits between the synucleinopathies and tauopathies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archneur.63.2.268DOI Listing

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