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posted by takyon on Wednesday July 03 2019, @08:24AM   Printer-friendly
from the go-to-bed-old-man dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Disrupted sleep in one's 50s, 60s raises risk of Alzheimer's disease: Protein tangles in the aging brain throw sleep rhythms out of sync, likely leading to memory loss

People who report a declining quality of sleep as they age from their 50s to their 60s have more protein tangles in their brain, putting them at higher risk of developing Alzheimer's disease later in life, according to a new study by psychologists at the University of California, Berkeley.

The new finding highlights the importance of sleep at every age to maintain a healthy brain into old age.

"Insufficient sleep across the lifespan is significantly predictive of your development of Alzheimer's disease pathology in the brain," said the study's senior author, Matthew Walker, a sleep researcher and professor of psychology. "Unfortunately, there is no decade of life that we were able to measure during which you can get away with less sleep. There is no Goldilocks decade during which you can say, 'This is when I get my chance to short sleep.'"

Walker and his colleagues, including graduate student and first author Joseph Winer, found that adults reporting a decline in sleep quality in their 40s and 50s had more beta-amyloid protein in their brains later in life, as measured by positron emission tomography, or PET. Those reporting a sleep decline in their 50s and 60s had more tau protein tangles. Both beta-amyloid and tau clusters are associated with a higher risk of developing dementia, though not everyone with protein tangles goes on to develop symptoms of dementia.

Sleep as a potential biomarker of tau and β-amyloid burden in the human brain (DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0503-19.2019) (DX)


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 03 2019, @01:08PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 03 2019, @01:08PM (#862686)

    How are they sure that asking people with alzhiemers how much sleep they were getting decades earlier yields reliable responses?

    And just from the abstract you can tell this is some phacked nonsense:

    > Regression analyses revealed that the severity of impaired slow oscillation-sleep spindle coupling predicted greater medial temporal lobe tau burden. Aβ burden was not associated with coupling impairment, but instead predicted the diminished amplitude of 1Hz slow-wave-activity—results that were statistically dissociable from each other. Additionally, comparisons of AD pathology and retrospective, self-reported changes in sleep duration demonstrated that changes in sleep across the lifespan can predict late-life Aβ and tau burden.

    So they looked at a bunch of correlations and some turned out "statistically significant".