Age-Related Changes in Sleep and Its Implications for Cognitive Decline in Aging Persons With Schizophrenia: A Critical Review.

IF 5.3 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Schizophrenia Bulletin Pub Date : 2025-03-14 DOI:10.1093/schbul/sbae059
Bengi Baran, Ellen E Lee
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Abstract

Background and hypothesis: Cognitive impairment is a core feature of schizophrenia that worsens with aging and interferes with quality of life. Recent work identifies sleep as an actionable target to alleviate cognitive deficits. Cardinal non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep oscillations such as sleep spindles and slow oscillations are critical for cognition. People living with schizophrenia (PLWS) and their first-degree relatives have a specific reduction in sleep spindles and an abnormality in their temporal coordination with slow oscillations that predict impaired memory consolidation. While NREM oscillatory activity is reduced in typical aging, it is not known how further disruption in these oscillations contributes to cognitive decline in older PLWS. Another understudied risk factor for cognitive deficits among older PLWS is obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) which may contribute to cognitive decline.

Study design: We conducted a narrative review to examine the published literature on aging, OSA, and NREM sleep oscillations in PLWS.

Study results: Spindles are propagated via thalamocortical feedback loops, and this circuitry shows abnormal hyperconnectivity in schizophrenia as revealed by structural and functional MRI studies. While the risk and severity of OSA increase with age, older PLWS are particularly vulnerable to OSA-related cognitive deficits because OSA is often underdiagnosed and undertreated, and OSA adds further damage to the circuitry that generates NREM sleep oscillations.

Conclusions: We highlight the critical need to study NREM sleep in older PWLS and propose that identifying and treating OSA in older PLWS will provide an avenue to potentially mitigate and prevent cognitive decline.

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与年龄有关的睡眠变化及其对老年精神分裂症患者认知能力下降的影响:批判性评论。
背景和假设:认知障碍是精神分裂症的一个核心特征,它会随着年龄的增长而加重,并影响生活质量。最近的研究发现,睡眠是缓解认知障碍的可操作目标。红衣主教非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠振荡,如睡眠棘波和慢振荡对认知至关重要。精神分裂症患者(PLWS)及其一级亲属的睡眠棘波会出现特定的减少,其与慢振荡的时间协调也会出现异常,这预示着他们的记忆巩固能力会受损。虽然在典型的衰老过程中 NREM 振荡活动会减少,但目前还不清楚这些振荡的进一步破坏是如何导致老年 PLWS 认知能力下降的。阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)是老年 PLWS 认知缺陷的另一个未被充分研究的风险因素,它可能会导致认知能力下降:研究设计:我们对已发表的有关 PLWS 的衰老、OSA 和 NREM 睡眠振荡的文献进行了叙述性综述:研究结果:棘波通过丘脑皮层反馈环路传播,结构和功能磁共振成像研究显示,精神分裂症患者的这一环路具有异常的超连接性。虽然OSA的风险和严重程度会随着年龄的增长而增加,但老年PLWS尤其容易出现与OSA相关的认知障碍,因为OSA往往诊断不足、治疗不及时,而且OSA会进一步损害产生NREM睡眠振荡的回路:我们强调了研究老年PWLS的NREM睡眠的迫切需要,并建议识别和治疗老年PLWS的OSA将为减轻和预防认知能力下降提供潜在的途径。
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来源期刊
Schizophrenia Bulletin
Schizophrenia Bulletin 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
6.10%
发文量
163
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Schizophrenia Bulletin seeks to review recent developments and empirically based hypotheses regarding the etiology and treatment of schizophrenia. We view the field as broad and deep, and will publish new knowledge ranging from the molecular basis to social and cultural factors. We will give new emphasis to translational reports which simultaneously highlight basic neurobiological mechanisms and clinical manifestations. Some of the Bulletin content is invited as special features or manuscripts organized as a theme by special guest editors. Most pages of the Bulletin are devoted to unsolicited manuscripts of high quality that report original data or where we can provide a special venue for a major study or workshop report. Supplement issues are sometimes provided for manuscripts reporting from a recent conference.
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