限制卧床时间的试验性干预可通过行为增强老年人的慢波活动

Kristine A. Wilckens, Rima F. Habte, Yue Dong, M. Stepan, Kibra M. Dessa, Alexis B. Whitehead, Christine W. Peng, Mary E. Fletcher, Daniel J. Buysse
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摘要

确定针对涉及记忆处理的睡眠特征的干预方法是认知老龄化领域的当务之急。睡眠效率和非快速眼动慢波活动(SWA)(0.5-4 赫兹脑电活动)较高的老年人往往表现出较好的记忆和认知能力。矛盾的是,总睡眠时间长的老年人认知能力一直较差。因此,相对于单纯增加总睡眠时间,最大限度地提高睡眠效率和SWA可能是一个优先事项。由于临床行为睡眠治疗并不能持续提高SWA,而SWA的倾向会随着清醒时间的增加而增加,因此我们通过一项概念验证试点干预研究,考察了更大剂量的卧床时间(TiB)限制(习惯TiB的75%)是否能在不影响记忆力的情况下提高难以入睡的老年人的睡眠效率和SWA。在为期一周的TiB限制干预前后,对睡眠日记、动图、多导睡眠图(PSG)以及配对联想记忆的获得和保持进行了评估(n = 30)。TiB被限制在日记报告的习惯TiB的75%。主观和客观睡眠测量结果显示,TiB限制组的睡眠质量、睡眠深度、睡眠效率和WASO均有显著改善,但TiB以及N1和N2睡眠时间有所减少。正如假设的那样,在 0.5-4 Hz 范围内,随着 TiB 限制的实施,SWA 以及主观睡眠深度、主观和客观 WASO 均有显著增加。尽管嗜睡评分增加了,但在记忆获取或保持方面却没有发现任何损害。TiB限制剂量相当于习惯TiB的75%,可显著提高有睡眠维持困难的老年人的睡眠连续性和SWA,而不会损害记忆表现。这些发现可为旨在改善记忆表现和认知障碍风险的长期行为性SWA增强干预措施提供参考。
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A pilot time-in-bed restriction intervention behaviorally enhances slow-wave activity in older adults
Identifying intervention methods that target sleep characteristics involved in memory processing is a priority for the field of cognitive aging. Older adults with greater sleep efficiency and non-rapid eye movement slow-wave activity (SWA) (0.5–4 Hz electroencephalographic activity) tend to exhibit better memory and cognitive abilities. Paradoxically, long total sleep times are consistently associated with poorer cognition in older adults. Thus, maximizing sleep efficiency and SWA may be a priority relative to increasing mere total sleep time. As clinical behavioral sleep treatments do not consistently enhance SWA, and propensity for SWA increases with time spent awake, we examined with a proof-of concept pilot intervention whether a greater dose of time-in-bed (TiB) restriction (75% of habitual TiB) would increase both sleep efficiency and SWA in older adults with difficulties staying asleep without impairing memory performance.Participants were adults ages 55–80 with diary-reported sleep efficiency < 90% and wake after sleep onset (WASO) >20 min. Sleep diary, actigraphy, polysomnography (PSG), and paired associate memory acquisition and retention were assessed before and after a week-long TiB restriction intervention (n = 30). TiB was restricted to 75% of diary-reported habitual TiB. A comparison group of n = 5 participants repeated assessments while following their usual sleep schedule to obtain preliminary estimates of effect sizes associated with repeated testing.Subjective and objective sleep measures robustly improved in the TiB restriction group for sleep quality, sleep depth, sleep efficiency and WASO, at the expense of TiB and time spent in N1 and N2 sleep. As hypothesized, SWA increased robustly with TiB restriction across the 0.5–4 Hz range, as well as subjective sleep depth, subjective and objective WASO. Despite increases in sleepiness ratings, no impairments were found in memory acquisition or retention.A TiB restriction dose equivalent to 75% of habitual TiB robustly increased sleep continuity and SWA in older adults with sleep maintenance difficulties, without impairing memory performance. These findings may inform long-term behavioral SWA enhancement interventions aimed at improving memory performance and risk for cognitive impairments.
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