AI Article Synopsis

  • Sleep disturbances and declines in white matter microstructure are common in older adults and are linked to psychiatric and neurological issues, but few studies have explored the connection between sleep quality and brain microstructure directly.
  • A study using diffusion tensor imaging involved 448 participants aged 60-82 and found that poor sleep quality correlated with changes in white matter microstructure, specifically reduced global fractional anisotropy and increased diffusivity, particularly in frontal-subcortical areas.
  • The findings suggest a link between current sleep quality and white matter changes, but small effect sizes indicate that poor sleep may not be a strong modifiable factor for improving brain health in aging.

Article Abstract

Both sleep disturbances and decline in white matter microstructure are commonly observed in ageing populations, as well as in age-related psychiatric and neurological illnesses. A relationship between sleep and white matter microstructure may underlie such relationships, but few imaging studies have directly examined this hypothesis. In a study of 448 community-dwelling members of the Whitehall II Imaging Sub-Study aged between 60 and 82 years (90 female, mean age 69.2 ± 5.1 years), we used the magnetic resonance imaging technique diffusion tensor imaging to examine the relationship between self-reported sleep quality and white matter microstructure. Poor sleep quality at the time of the diffusion tensor imaging scan was associated with reduced global fractional anisotropy and increased global axial diffusivity and radial diffusivity values, with small effect sizes. Voxel-wise analysis showed that widespread frontal-subcortical tracts, encompassing regions previously reported as altered in insomnia, were affected. Radial diffusivity findings remained significant after additional correction for demographics, general cognition, health, and lifestyle measures. No significant differences in general cognitive function, executive function, memory, or processing speed were detected between good and poor sleep quality groups. The number of times participants reported poor sleep quality over five time-points spanning a 16-year period was not associated with white matter measures. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that current sleep quality is linked to white matter microstructure. Small effect sizes may limit the extent to which poor sleep is a promising modifiable factor that may maintain, or even improve, white matter microstructure in ageing. Hum Brain Mapp 38:5465-5473, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655937PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hbm.23739DOI Listing

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