BIOMED   24552
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOMEDICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Relationship between Cognitive and Sleep-wake Variables in Asymptomatic Offspring of Patients with Late-onset Alzheimer?s Disease
Autor/es:
MIRTA F. VILLARREAL; GERALDINE SEQUEYRA; KARL-JÜRGEN BÄR; SALVADOR M. GUINJOAN; BÁRBARA DUARTE-ABRITTA; CELESTE GARCÍA; LETICIA FIORENTINI; DANIEL E. VIGO; CAROLINA ABULAFIA; MARÍA S. LADRÓN-DE-GUEVARA; GUSTAVO SEVLEVER; DEBORAH R. GUSTAFSON
Revista:
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Editorial:
Frontiers
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 9 p. 1 - 8
Resumen:
Early neuropathological changes characteristic of late-onset Alzheimer?s disease (LOAD)involve brain stem and limbic structures that regulate neurovegetative functions, including sleep?wake rhythm. Indeed, sleep pattern is an emerging biomarker and a potential pathophysiological mechanism in LOAD. We hypothesized that cognitively asymptomatic, middle-aged offspring of patients with LOAD (O-LOAD) would display a series of circadian rhythm abnormalities prior to the onset of objective cognitivealterations. We tested 31 children of patients with LOAD (O-LOAD) and 19 healthy individuals without family history of Alzheimer?s disease (control subjects, CS) with basic tests of cognitive function, as well as actigraphy measures of sleep?wake rhythm, cardiac autonomic function, and bodily temperature. Unexpectedly, O-LOAD displayed subtle but significant deficits in verbal episodic memory (Rey Auditory Verbal LearningTest delayed recall 10.6 0.4 vs. 8.6 0.6, t D 4.97, df D 49, p < 0.01) and language (Weschler?s vocabulary 51.4 1.3 vs. 44.3 1.5, t D 2.49, df D 49, p < 0.001) compared to CS, even though all participants had results within the clinically normal range. O-LOAD showed a phase-delayed rhythm of body temperature (2.56 0.47 h vs. 3.8 0.26 h, t D 2.48, df D 40, p D 0.031). Cognitive performance in O-LOAD was associated with a series of cardiac autonomic sleep?wake variables; specifically indicators of greater sympathetic activity at night were related to poorercognition. The present results suggest sleep pattern deserves further study as a potential neurobiological signature in LOAD, even in middle-aged, at risk individuals.