Severity of REM sleep without atonia correlates with measures of cognitive impairment and depressive symptoms in REM sleep behaviour disorder

Author:

Figorilli Michela12ORCID,Meloni Federico1,Lecca Rosamaria1,Tamburrino Ludovica1,Mascia Maria Giuseppina3,Cocco Viola1,Meloni Mario4,Marques Ana Raquel5ORCID,Vidal Tiphaine5,Congiu Patrizia1ORCID,Defazio Giovanni2,Durif Frank5,Lanza Giuseppe67ORCID,Ferri Raffaele6ORCID,Schenck Carlos H.8,Fantini Maria Livia5,Puligheddu Monica12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sleep Disorder Research Center, Department of Medical Sciences and Public Health University of Cagliari Cagliari Italy

2. Neurology Unit, Department of Medical Sciences and Public Health, University of Cagliari and AOU Cagliari, Monserrato Cagliari Italy

3. ASL Cagliari Italy

4. IRCCS, Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi ONLUS Milan Italy

5. Université Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, Clermont Auvergne INP, Institut Pascal, Clermont‐Ferrand University Hospital, Neurophysiology Department Clermont‐Ferrand France

6. Sleep Research Centre, Oasi Research Institute‐IRCCS Troina Italy

7. Department of Surgery and Medical‐Surgical Specialties University of Catania Catania Italy

8. Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center, and Departments of Psychiatry Hennepin County Medical Center and University of Minnesota Medical School Minneapolis Minnesota USA

Abstract

SummaryThis study aimed to correlate REM sleep without atonia (RSWA) and neuropsychological data in patients with idiopathic/isolated REM sleep behaviour disorder (iRBD) and those with RBD associated with Parkinson's disease (PDRBD), in order to assess whether higher degrees of RSWA are related to poorer cognitive performance. A total of 142 subjects were enrolled: 48 with iRBD, 55 with PDRBD, and 39 PD without RBD (PDnoRBD). All participants underwent video‐polysomnographic recording, clinical and neuropsychological assessment. RSWA was quantified according to two manual scoring methods (Montréal, SINBAR) and one automated (REM atonia index, RAI). Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) was diagnosed according to diagnostic criteria for MCI in Parkinson's disease. The relationship between neuropsychological scores and RSWA metrics was explored by multiple linear regression analysis and logistic regression models. Patients with iRBD showed significantly lower visuospatial functions and working memory, compared with the others. More severe RSWA was associated with a higher risk of reduced visuospatial abilities (OR 0.15), working memory (OR 2.48), attention (OR 2.53), and semantic fluency (OR 0.15) in the iRBD. In the whole group, a greater RSWA was associated with an increased risk for depressive symptoms (OR 3.6). A total of 57(40%) MCI subjects were found (17 iRBD, 26 PDRBD, and 14 PDnoRBD). Preserved REM‐atonia was associated with a reduced odds of multi‐domain MCI in the whole study population (OR 0.54). In conclusion, a greater severity of RSWA was associated with an increased risk for poor cognitive performance and depressive mood in patients with RBD. Moreover, higher RAI was associated with a lower risk of multi‐domain MCI.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,General Medicine

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