Patients with dementia often have difficulty sleeping, but previous
research has offered a mixed picture of which comes first – the
cognitive decline or the sleep deficit.
For the current study, researchers examined data from overnight
sleep studies for 321 adults age 60 or older who didn’t have
dementia. After an average follow-up of 12 years, 32 people
developed dementia.
Each percentage reduction in the time people spent in REM sleep was
associated with a 9 percent increase in the risk of dementia,
researchers report in Neurology.
“We observe an association between sleep and dementia but cannot
determine whether reduced REM causes dementia,” said lead study
author Matthew Pase of Swinburne University in Australia.

“It is unclear whether increasing REM sleep reduces dementia risk,”
Pase, who did the research as part of the Framingham Heart Study at
Boston University, said by email. “However, good quality sleep is
clearly important for overall health and well-being and the emerging
picture suggests that sleep and dementia may influence each other.”
Overall, study participants spent about 20 percent of their sleeping
time in REM sleep, the sleep analysis found. But the subset of
people who went on to develop dementia spent only 17 percent of
their sleep time in REM sleep.
Out of all the dementia cases found in the current study, 25 percent
occurred within the first 6.6 years of follow-up. The total included
24 instances of Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form of
dementia.
Reduced REM was associated with similar increases in the risk of
both Alzheimer’s and other dementia cases.
Researchers also looked at what’s known as sleep latency, or how
long it takes to fall asleep, and didn’t find this related to the
risk of developing dementia.
[to top of second column] |

The study is small, and the results would need to be confirmed by
more research in larger groups of people, said Dr. Eric Larson, vice
president for research at Kaiser Permanente Washington and a
professor at the University of Washington in Seattle.
But that doesn’t mean people should ignore the importance of REM
sleep.
“REM sleep is considered the part of the sleep cycle where our
brains get rejuvenated,” Larson, who wasn’t involved in the study,
said by email. “It’s considered the best part of sleep from a
perspective of gaining the rest that restores well-being.”
Other research has linked both insomnia and a nighttime breathing
disorder known as sleep apnea with an increased risk of dementia,
noted Dr. Kristine Yaffe, a psychiatry and neurology researcher at
the University of California, San Francisco who wasn’t involved in
the study.
“This adds to the growing science that sleep health or quality is
related to brain health,” Yaffe said by email. “It is important to
tell your doctor about concerns about your sleep and follow good
sleep hygiene practices.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2xMYjve Neurology, online August 23, 2017
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |