Sleep characteristics and brain structure: A systematic review with meta-analysis

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Sleep medicine Pub Date : 2025-02-25 DOI:10.1016/j.sleep.2025.02.028
Tergel Namsrai , Joseph M. Northey , Ananthan Ambikairajah , Oli Ahmed , Khawlah Alateeq , Daniela Andrea Espinoza Oyarce , Richard Burns , Ben Rattray , Nicolas Cherbuin
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Abstract

Background

As the global population ages, the prevalence of associated conditions, including neurodegeneration and dementia, will increase. Thus, reducing risk factors is crucial to prevention. Sleep contributes to brain homeostasis and repair, which, if impaired, could lead to neurodegeneration. However, the relationship between sleep characteristics, disorders, and brain morphology is poorly understood in healthy adults. Therefore, we aimed to systematically analyse the literature and clarify how sleep characteristics are associated with brain structures.

Methods

We systematically searched PUBMED, MEDLINE, ProQuest, Web of Science, and Scopus for empirical studies of healthy adults examining the associations between sleep characteristics or disorders and brain structure, adjusting for age, gender, and head size. We conducted a meta-analysis with random effects models for volumetric studies and a seed-based spatial analysis for voxel-based morphometry (VBM) studies.

Results

One hundred and five articles (60 volumetric, 45 VBM) with 106 studies reporting 108,364 participants were included. Most studies (73.1%) found sleep characteristics and disorders to be associated with predominantly lower brain volumes (cross-sectional: 51.9% of all cross-sectional; longitudinal: 45.5% of longitudinal). In VBM studies, REM sleep behaviour disorder was linked to lower grey matter volume in the right frontal gyrus (z-score = −3.617, 68 voxels, p-value = <0 0.001).

Conclusion

Sleep characteristics - poor quality, short or long sleep - and sleep disorders are predominantly associated with lower brain volumes, suggesting that inadequate sleep (short, long or poor quality) might contribute to neurodegeneration. This insight highlights the importance of monitoring, managing, and enforcing sleep health to prevent or mitigate potential neurodegenerative processes.
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睡眠特征与大脑结构:系统回顾与荟萃分析
随着全球人口老龄化,包括神经变性和痴呆在内的相关疾病的患病率将会增加。因此,减少危险因素对预防至关重要。睡眠有助于大脑的内稳态和修复,如果受损,可能会导致神经退化。然而,在健康成人中,睡眠特征、障碍和大脑形态之间的关系尚不清楚。因此,我们的目标是系统地分析文献,阐明睡眠特征与大脑结构的关系。方法系统地检索PUBMED、MEDLINE、ProQuest、Web of Science和Scopus等健康成人的经验研究,检查睡眠特征或障碍与大脑结构之间的关系,并根据年龄、性别和头部大小进行调整。我们对体积研究的随机效应模型进行了荟萃分析,并对基于体素的形态测量(VBM)研究进行了基于种子的空间分析。结果纳入105篇文献(60篇容积法,45篇VBM), 106篇研究报告108,364名受试者。大多数研究(73.1%)发现睡眠特征和障碍主要与脑容量较低相关(横断面:51.9%;纵向:纵向的45.5%)。在VBM研究中,REM睡眠行为障碍与右侧额回灰质体积降低有关(z-score = - 3.617, 68体素,p值= <0 0.001)。睡眠特征(睡眠质量差、睡眠时间短或长)和睡眠障碍主要与脑容量减少有关,这表明睡眠不足(睡眠时间短、睡眠时间长或睡眠质量差)可能导致神经变性。这一见解强调了监测、管理和加强睡眠健康以预防或减轻潜在神经退行性过程的重要性。
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来源期刊
Sleep medicine
Sleep medicine 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1060
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍: Sleep Medicine aims to be a journal no one involved in clinical sleep medicine can do without. A journal primarily focussing on the human aspects of sleep, integrating the various disciplines that are involved in sleep medicine: neurology, clinical neurophysiology, internal medicine (particularly pulmonology and cardiology), psychology, psychiatry, sleep technology, pediatrics, neurosurgery, otorhinolaryngology, and dentistry. The journal publishes the following types of articles: Reviews (also intended as a way to bridge the gap between basic sleep research and clinical relevance); Original Research Articles; Full-length articles; Brief communications; Controversies; Case reports; Letters to the Editor; Journal search and commentaries; Book reviews; Meeting announcements; Listing of relevant organisations plus web sites.
期刊最新文献
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