Association between sleep disorders and cognitive dysfunctions in non-demented patients with advanced Parkinson’s disease

Jul 30, 2021Journal of neurology

Sleep Problems Linked to Thinking Difficulties in Parkinson's Patients without Dementia

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Abstract

Advanced Parkinson's disease patients reported mild to moderate sleep problems with a PDSS-2 score of 23.4 ± 1.2.

  • Significant correlations were observed between sleep disturbances and non-verbal reasoning, attention, executive functions, and language abilities.
  • Patients with clinically relevant sleep disturbances performed worse in attention, executive functions, and language tasks.
  • No significant correlations were found between sleep measures and memory test scores.
  • Daytime sleepiness did not correlate with any neuropsychological test results.

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Key numbers

23.4 ± 11.2
Mean PDSS-2 Score
Average score reflecting sleep quality among patients.
59 of 181
Clinically Relevant Sleep Disturbances
Percentage of patients with PDSS-2 score ≥ 18.
48 out of 181
Patients with Excessive Daytime Sleepiness
Patients with score ≥ 10.

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What this is

  • This study investigates the relationship between sleep disorders and cognitive dysfunctions in advanced Parkinson's disease (PD) patients.
  • It focuses on a cohort of 181 non-demented PD patients undergoing device-aided therapy.
  • The analysis reveals correlations between sleep disturbances and specific cognitive impairments, particularly in reasoning, attention, executive functions, and language.

Essence

  • In advanced Parkinson's disease, sleep disturbances correlate with impairments in reasoning, attention, executive functions, and language, but not memory.

Key takeaways

  • Patients reported mild to moderate sleep problems, with a mean PDSS-2 score of 23.4 ± 11.2. Higher PDSS-2 scores correlated with worse performance in reasoning, attention, executive functions, and language.
  • Clinically relevant sleep disturbances were found in 59 out of 181 patients (32.6%). These patients performed worse on attention, executive functions, and language tests compared to those without significant sleep alterations.
  • No significant correlations were found between daytime sleepiness and cognitive performance, indicating that sleep disturbances rather than sleepiness are linked to cognitive dysfunction in advanced PD.

Caveats

  • The study lacks instrumental assessment of sleep disorders, which may limit the accuracy of sleep disturbance evaluations. Additionally, only non-demented patients were included, reducing generalizability.
  • As an observational study, causative relationships cannot be established, and further longitudinal studies are needed to explore the potential impact of sleep disturbances on cognitive decline.

Definitions

  • Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale (PDSS-2): A self-administered questionnaire assessing various aspects of sleep disturbances in Parkinson's disease patients.
  • Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS): A scale measuring daytime sleepiness based on the likelihood of dozing off in various situations.

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