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Comorbid neurotrauma increases neurodegenerative-relevant cognitive, motor, and autonomic dysfunction in patients with rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder: a substudy of the North American Prodromal Synucleinopathy Consortium.

Jonathan E ElliottBrittany R LigmanMohini D Bryant-EkstrandAllison T KeilKatherine PowersCosette OlivoLee E NeilsonRonald B PostumaAmélie PelletierJean-François GagnonZiv Gan OrEric YuLang LiuErik K St LouisLeah K ForsbergJulie A FieldsOwen A RossDaniel E HuddlestonDonald L BliwiseAlon Y AvidanMichael J HowellCarlos H SchenckJennifer McLelandSusan R CriswellAleksandar VidenovicEmmanuel H DuringMitchell G MiglisDavid R ShprecherJoyce K Lee-IannottiBradley F BoeveYo-El S JuMiranda M Limnull null
Published in: Sleep (2024)
This cross-sectional, matched case:control study shows individuals with RBD + NT have significantly worse neurological measures related to common features of an overt synucleinopathy. Confirmatory longitudinal studies are ongoing; however, these results suggest RBD + NT may be associated with more advanced neurological symptoms related to an evolving neurodegenerative process.
Keyphrases
  • cross sectional
  • sleep quality
  • oxidative stress
  • physical activity
  • heart rate variability
  • parkinson disease
  • heart rate
  • blood pressure
  • blood brain barrier
  • drug induced
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification