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ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION Sleep disruptions are associated with cognitive aging in older adults. However, it is unclear whether longitudinal changes in 24-hour multidimensional sleep-wake activity are linked to cognitive impairment in the oldest old. METHODS We studied 733 cognitively unimpaired women (mean age=82.5±2.9 years) who completed two actigraphy assessments over five years. We performed hierarchical clustering on principal components in nine sleep, napping, and circadian rest-activity rhythm parameters to identify multidimensional sleep-wake change profiles and multinomial logistic regression to evaluate the associations between sleep-wake changes and risk of cognitive impairment at follow-up. RESULTS We identified three sleep-wake change profiles: Stable Sleep (43.8%), Declining Nighttime Sleep (34.9%), and Increasing Sleepiness (21.3%). After adjustment for demographics and comorbidities, women with Increasing Sleepiness had approximately doubled (odds ratio=2.21, p=0.018) risk of dementia compared to those with Stable Sleep. DISCUSSION Increasing sleepiness may be an independent marker or risk factor for dementia in oldest old women.
Milton et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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