Vascular brain injury modifies the relationship between sleep duration, cognition, and white matter hyperintensity burden in the Alzheimer's disease continuum
Lahlou, S.; Ismail, Z.; Smith, E. E.; Dang-Vu, T. T.; Badhwar, A.
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INTRODUCTIONSelf-reported sleep duration is associated with dementia-risk and vascular brain injury markers, including white matter hyperintensities (WMHs), yet how additional cerebrovascular pathology alters these relationships remains unclear. METHODIn a deeply-phenotyped cohort (735) including healthy and Alzheimers continuum individuals (subjective and mild cognitive impairment (MCI), dementia (AD), MCI and AD with high vascular burden (+V)), sleep was assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Individuals were classified as WMH-only or WMH+ (WMHs with microbleeds, infarcts, or cerebral amyloid angiopathy). Linear models tested interactions between sleep duration, WMH+ status, and diagnostic group on WMH burden and cognition. RESULTSIn MCI+V and AD, WMH+ significantly amplified the association between shorter sleep and greater WMH burden. In AD, longer sleep related to better cognition in WMH+, but worse cognition in WMH-only (exploratory). DISCUSSIONAdditional vascular brain injury modifies how sleep relates to WMH burden and cognition across the AD continuum, highlighting the importance of moving beyond WMHs alone.
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