Acoustic stimulation during sleep predicts long-lasting increases in memory performance and beneficial amyloid response in older adults

Marina Wunderlin, Celine Jacqueline Zeller, Samira Rafaela Senti,Kristoffer Daniel Feher, Debora Suppiger,Patric Wyss,Thomas Koenig,Charlotte Elisabeth Teunissen,Christoph Nissen,Stefan Kloppel, Marc Alain Zust

AGE AND AGEING(2023)

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摘要
Background Sleep and neurodegeneration are assumed to be locked in a bi-directional vicious cycle. Improving sleep could break this cycle and help to prevent neurodegeneration. We tested multi-night phase-locked acoustic stimulation (PLAS) during slow wave sleep (SWS) as a non-invasive method to improve SWS, memory performance and plasma amyloid levels.Methods 32 healthy older adults (agemean: 68.9) completed a between-subject sham-controlled three-night intervention, preceded by a sham-PLAS baseline night.Results PLAS induced increases in sleep-associated spectral-power bands as well as a 24% increase in slow wave-coupled spindles, known to support memory consolidation. There was no significant group-difference in memory performance or amyloid-beta between the intervention and control group. However, the magnitude of PLAS-induced physiological responses were associated with memory performance up to 3 months post intervention and beneficial changes in plasma amyloid. Results were exclusive to the intervention group.Discussion Multi-night PLAS is associated with long-lasting benefits in memory and metabolite clearance in older adults, rendering PLAS a promising tool to build upon and develop long-term protocols for the prevention of cognitive decline.
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acoustic stimulation,slow wave sleep,memory,amyloid beta,dementia prevention,ageing
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