The intertwining between epilepsy, sleep disorders and beta amyloid pathology has been progressively highlighted, as early identification and stratification of patients at high risk of cognitive decline is the need of the hour. Modification of the sleep-wake activity, such as sleep impairment or excessive daytime sleepiness, can critically affect cerebral beta amyloid levels. Both mice models and human studies have demonstrated a substantial increase in the burden of beta amyloid pathology after sleep-deprivation, with potential negative effects partially restored by sleep recovery. The accumulation of beta amyloid has been shown to be an early event in the course of Alzheimer's disease dementia. Beta amyloid accumulation has been linked to epileptic seizures epileptic seizures, with beta amyloid being itself pro-epileptogenic in mice models already at oligomeric stage, well before plaque deposition. Further supporting a potential relationship between beta amyloid and epilepsy: i) seizures happen in 1 out of oofut 10 patients with Alzheimer's disease in the prodromal stage, ii) epileptic activity accelerates cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease, iii) people with late-onset epilepsy present a critically high risk of developing dementia. In this Review we highlight the role of beta amyloid as a potential shared mechanisms between sleep disorders, late-onset epilepsy, and cognitive decline.

Liguori, C., Spanetta, M., Romoli, M., Placidi, F., Nardi Cesarini, E., Mercuri, N.b., et al. (2021). Sleep disorders and late-onset epilepsy of unknown origin: Understanding new trajectories to brain amyloidopathy. MECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT, 194, 111434 [10.1016/j.mad.2021.111434].

Sleep disorders and late-onset epilepsy of unknown origin: Understanding new trajectories to brain amyloidopathy

Liguori, Claudio
;
Placidi, Fabio;Mercuri, Nicola Biagio;Costa, Cinzia
2021-01-01

Abstract

The intertwining between epilepsy, sleep disorders and beta amyloid pathology has been progressively highlighted, as early identification and stratification of patients at high risk of cognitive decline is the need of the hour. Modification of the sleep-wake activity, such as sleep impairment or excessive daytime sleepiness, can critically affect cerebral beta amyloid levels. Both mice models and human studies have demonstrated a substantial increase in the burden of beta amyloid pathology after sleep-deprivation, with potential negative effects partially restored by sleep recovery. The accumulation of beta amyloid has been shown to be an early event in the course of Alzheimer's disease dementia. Beta amyloid accumulation has been linked to epileptic seizures epileptic seizures, with beta amyloid being itself pro-epileptogenic in mice models already at oligomeric stage, well before plaque deposition. Further supporting a potential relationship between beta amyloid and epilepsy: i) seizures happen in 1 out of oofut 10 patients with Alzheimer's disease in the prodromal stage, ii) epileptic activity accelerates cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease, iii) people with late-onset epilepsy present a critically high risk of developing dementia. In this Review we highlight the role of beta amyloid as a potential shared mechanisms between sleep disorders, late-onset epilepsy, and cognitive decline.
2021
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA
English
Beta-amyloid
Excessive daytime sleepiness
Insomnia
Late-onset epilepsy
Sleep
Sleep-disordered breathing
Alzheimer Disease
Amyloid beta-Peptides
Animals
Brain
Cognition
Epilepsy
Humans
Late Onset Disorders
Plaque, Amyloid
Risk Factors
Sleep Wake Disorders
Brain Waves
Sleep
Liguori, C., Spanetta, M., Romoli, M., Placidi, F., Nardi Cesarini, E., Mercuri, N.b., et al. (2021). Sleep disorders and late-onset epilepsy of unknown origin: Understanding new trajectories to brain amyloidopathy. MECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT, 194, 111434 [10.1016/j.mad.2021.111434].
Liguori, C; Spanetta, M; Romoli, M; Placidi, F; Nardi Cesarini, E; Mercuri, Nb; Costa, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/301049
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