Napping alters Functional Brain Responses in the Aged

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Circadian rhythms shape the temporal organization of sleep and wakefulness and evolve throughout the adult lifespan, leading to higher sleep-wake cycle fragmentation with ageing. The increasing prevalence of daytime napping represents a visible manifestation of such fragmentation and has been suggested to forecast age-related cognitive decline. Here, we assessed the impact of napping on functional brain correlates of performance on a Sternberg working memory (WM) task using functional magnetic resonance imaging in 60 healthy older individuals, prospectively recruited with respect to their napping habits (39 females, age: 59-82y). As compared to non-nappers, nappers showed reduced hemispheric asymmetry in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC, p< 0.001) and decreased performance at high WM load levels. Only in non-nappers was increased ipsilateral activation in the DLPFC associated with better performance at high WM load levels (p < 0.05), while contralateral activation across all WM load levels was not associated with better performance. These findings indicate that functional brain compensation and dedifferentiation processes vary according to an individual's napping phenotype, potentially serving as a marker of inter-individual differences in cognitive and brain aging.

Article activity feed