Midpoint of sleep is associated with sleep quality in older adults with and without symptomatic Alzheimer's disease.
Scott C SauersCristina D ToedebuschRachel RichardsonAdam P SpiraJohn C MorrisDavid M HoltzmanBrendan P LuceyPublished in: Sleep advances : a journal of the Sleep Research Society (2024)
Noninvasive in vivo markers of brain function, such as sleep, are needed to track both future risk of cognitive impairment and response to interventions in older adults at risk for AD. Sleep timing is associated with multiple other sleep measures and may affect their utility as markers of AD. The midpoint of sleep may be changed through behavioral intervention and should be taken into account when using sleep as a marker for AD risk.