Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding

Disrupted sleep is more common in older adults (OA) than younger adults (YA), often co-morbid with other conditions. How these sleep disturbances affect cognitive performance is an area of active study. We examined whether brain activation during verbal encoding correlates with sleep quantity and qu...

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Main Authors: Michelle B Jonelis, Sean P.A. Drummond, Jennifer S Salamat, Benjamin S McKenna, Sonia eAncoli-Israel, Mark W Bondi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2012.00049/full
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spelling doaj-05122d062f264296a3d726e66e90e0b22020-11-25T00:21:09ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952012-04-01310.3389/fneur.2012.0004919982Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encodingMichelle B Jonelis0Sean P.A. Drummond1Sean P.A. Drummond2Jennifer S Salamat3Benjamin S McKenna4Sonia eAncoli-Israel5Mark W Bondi6Mark W Bondi7Stanford UniversityUniversity of California San DiegoVeterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare SystemVeterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare SystemVeterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare SystemUniversity of California San DiegoUniversity of California San DiegoVeterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare SystemDisrupted sleep is more common in older adults (OA) than younger adults (YA), often co-morbid with other conditions. How these sleep disturbances affect cognitive performance is an area of active study. We examined whether brain activation during verbal encoding correlates with sleep quantity and quality the night before testing in a group of healthy OA and YA. Twenty-seven OA (ages 59-82) and twenty-seven YA (ages 19-36) underwent one night of standard polysomnography. Twelve hours post-awakening, subjects performed a verbal encoding task while undergoing functional MRI. Analyses examined the group (OA vs. YA) by prior sleep quantity (Total Sleep Time (TST)) or quality (Sleep Efficiency (SE)) interaction on cerebral activation, controlling for performance. Longer TST promoted higher levels of activation in the bilateral anterior parahippocampi in OA and lower activation levels in the left anterior parahippocampus in YA. Greater SE promoted higher activation levels in the left posterior parahippocampus and right inferior frontal gyrus in YA, but not in OA. The roles of these brain regions in verbal encoding suggest, in OA, longer sleep duration may facilitate functional compensation during cognitive challenges. By contrast, in YA, shorter sleep duration may necessitate functional compensation to maintain cognitive performance, similar to what is seen following acute sleep deprivation. Additionally, in YA, better sleep quality may improve semantic retrieval processes, thereby aiding encoding.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2012.00049/fullAgingSleepSleep DeprivationfMRIcognitive performanceverbal encoding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle B Jonelis
Sean P.A. Drummond
Sean P.A. Drummond
Jennifer S Salamat
Benjamin S McKenna
Sonia eAncoli-Israel
Mark W Bondi
Mark W Bondi
spellingShingle Michelle B Jonelis
Sean P.A. Drummond
Sean P.A. Drummond
Jennifer S Salamat
Benjamin S McKenna
Sonia eAncoli-Israel
Mark W Bondi
Mark W Bondi
Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
Frontiers in Neurology
Aging
Sleep
Sleep Deprivation
fMRI
cognitive performance
verbal encoding
author_facet Michelle B Jonelis
Sean P.A. Drummond
Sean P.A. Drummond
Jennifer S Salamat
Benjamin S McKenna
Sonia eAncoli-Israel
Mark W Bondi
Mark W Bondi
author_sort Michelle B Jonelis
title Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
title_short Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
title_full Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
title_fullStr Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
title_full_unstemmed Age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
title_sort age-related influences of prior sleep on brain activation during verbal encoding
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurology
issn 1664-2295
publishDate 2012-04-01
description Disrupted sleep is more common in older adults (OA) than younger adults (YA), often co-morbid with other conditions. How these sleep disturbances affect cognitive performance is an area of active study. We examined whether brain activation during verbal encoding correlates with sleep quantity and quality the night before testing in a group of healthy OA and YA. Twenty-seven OA (ages 59-82) and twenty-seven YA (ages 19-36) underwent one night of standard polysomnography. Twelve hours post-awakening, subjects performed a verbal encoding task while undergoing functional MRI. Analyses examined the group (OA vs. YA) by prior sleep quantity (Total Sleep Time (TST)) or quality (Sleep Efficiency (SE)) interaction on cerebral activation, controlling for performance. Longer TST promoted higher levels of activation in the bilateral anterior parahippocampi in OA and lower activation levels in the left anterior parahippocampus in YA. Greater SE promoted higher activation levels in the left posterior parahippocampus and right inferior frontal gyrus in YA, but not in OA. The roles of these brain regions in verbal encoding suggest, in OA, longer sleep duration may facilitate functional compensation during cognitive challenges. By contrast, in YA, shorter sleep duration may necessitate functional compensation to maintain cognitive performance, similar to what is seen following acute sleep deprivation. Additionally, in YA, better sleep quality may improve semantic retrieval processes, thereby aiding encoding.
topic Aging
Sleep
Sleep Deprivation
fMRI
cognitive performance
verbal encoding
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2012.00049/full
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