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J Int Neuropsychol Soc · May 2012
Sleep onset/maintenance difficulties and cognitive function in nondemented older adults: the role of cognitive reserve.
- Molly E Zimmerman, Marcelo E Bigal, Mindy J Katz, Adam M Brickman, and Richard B Lipton.
- Department of Neurology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA. molly.zimmerman@einstein.yu.edu
- J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2012 May 1;18(3):461-70.
AbstractThis study examined the relationship between cognitive function and sleep onset/maintenance difficulties (SO/MD) in nondemented older adults. We hypothesized that SO/MD negatively impacts cognition and that older adults with lower education would be especially vulnerable to its effects. The sample comprised 549 older adults from the Einstein Aging Study (EAS), a community-based cohort. Participants completed neuropsychological assessment and a sleep questionnaire. Univariate ANCOVAs were performed with cognitive performance as a dependent variable, SO/MD (present or absent) and education (lower: ≤ 12 years; higher: >12 years) as between-subjects factors, and age, ethnicity, gender, depression, and cardiovascular comorbidies as covariates. Participants were an average age of 79.7 ± 5.0 years (range = 71-97 years). Fifty-seven percent (n = 314) of the sample met criteria for SO/MD. Among participants with SO/MD, those with lower education performed more poorly on a test of category fluency than participants with higher education (means: 35.2 vs. 41.0; p < .001); among older adults without SO/MD, educational attainment had no measurable effect on cognition (SO/MD × education interaction (F(1,536) = 14.5; p = .00)). Consistent with the cognitive reserve hypothesis, older adults with lower education appear selectively vulnerable to the negative effects of sleep onset/maintenance difficulties on tests of verbal fluency.
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