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A longitudinal observational population-based study of brain volume associated with changes in sleep timing from middle to late-life

Title
A longitudinal observational population-based study of brain volume associated with changes in sleep timing from middle to late-life
Authors
Kim R.E.Y.Kim H.J.Kim S.Abbott R.D.Thomas R.J.Yun C.-H.Lee H.W.Shin C.
Ewha Authors
이향운
SCOPUS Author ID
이향운scopus
Issue Date
2021
Journal Title
Sleep
ISSN
1550-9109JCR Link
Citation
Sleep vol. 44, no. 4
Keywords
agingbrainchronotypeMRIsleep
Publisher
NLM (Medline)
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Sleep behaviors are related to brain structure and function, but the impact of long-term changes in sleep timing on brain health has not been clearly addressed. The purpose of this study was to examine the association of longitudinal changes in sleep timing from middle to late-life with gray matter volume (GMV), an important marker of brain aging. METHODS: We enrolled 1798 adults (aged 49-82 years, men 54.6%) who underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) between 2011 and 2014. Midsleep time (MST) on free days corrected for sleep debt on workdays was adopted as a marker of sleep timing. Data on MST were available at the time of MRI assessment and at examinations that were given 9 years earlier (2003-2004). Longitudinal changes in MST over the 9-year period were derived and categorized into quartiles. Subjects in quartile 1 were defined as "advancers" (MST advanced ≥ 1 h) while those in quartile 4 were defined as "delayers" (MST delayed ≥ 0.2 h). Quartiles 2-3 defined a reference group (MST change was considered modest). The relationship of GMV with MST changes over 9 years was investigated. RESULTS: Nine-year change in MST were significantly associated with GMV. Compared to the reference group, advancers had smaller GMVs in the frontal and temporal regions. A delay in MST was also associated with smaller cerebellar GMV. CONCLUSIONS: In middle-to-late adulthood, the direction of change in MST is associated with GMV. While advancers and delayers in MST tend to present lower GMV, associations appear to differ across brain regions. © Sleep Research Society 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.
DOI
10.1093/sleep/zsaa233
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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