Seasonal plasticity of cognition and related biological measures in adults with and without Alzheimer disease: Analysis of multiple cohorts.
Andrew S P LimChris GaiteriLei YuShahmir SohailWalter SwardfagerShinya TasakiJulie A SchneiderClaire PaquetDonald T StussMario MasellisSandra E BlackJacques HugonAron S BuchmanLisa L BarnesDavid A BennettPhilip Lawrence De JagerPublished in: PLoS medicine (2018)
Season has a clinically significant association with cognition and its neurobiological correlates in older adults with and without AD pathology. There may be value in increasing dementia-related clinical resources in the winter and early spring, when symptoms are likely to be most pronounced. Moreover, the persistence of robust seasonal plasticity in cognition and its neurobiological correlates, even in the context of concomitant AD pathology, suggests that targeting environmental or behavioral drivers of seasonal cognitive plasticity, or the key transcription factors and genes identified in this study as potentially mediating these effects, may allow us to substantially improve cognition in adults with and without AD.