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Excessive Daytime Napping May Be a Sign of Alzheimer’s Disease

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  • Researchers have discovered that when a protein form tangles, it can kill nerve cells, destroying parts of the brain responsible for maintaining wakefulness.
  • The researchers theorize this is why excessive daytime sleepiness may be a symptom of Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Experts say that poor sleep patterns can also cause these protein tangles to form, and getting sufficient sleep is an important way to reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.

While an occasional nap can help us get through the day, excessive daytime sleepiness could be a sign of increased risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

That’s according to research published today by the University of California San Francisco (UCSF).

In the study, scientists measured signs of Alzheimer’s disease in the brain regions associated with promoting wakefulness in 13 deceased individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and compared them to 7 people who didn’t have it.

The researchers obtained the data from the UCSF Neurodegenerative Disease Brain Bank.

The brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease had a significant buildup of a protein called tau in all the wakefulness-promoting areas they examined.

Tau is a protein normally found within nerve cells that helps form structures that move nutrients within nerve cells.

Usually tau protein helps keep these structures — called microtubules — stable and strong. But in Alzheimer’s disease, this protein collapses into masses called tangles.

When this happens, the microtubules can no longer transport nutrients and other essential substances in nerve cells, leading to cell death.

Tau tangles are considered a sign of Alzheimer’s disease development.

“In this particular study, we were curious if a specific network within the brain stem and subcortical regions are affected in Alzheimer’s disease. We found that the network, which [promotes] wakefulness, is obliterated in Alzheimer’s disease,” Joseph Oh, the study’s lead author and a staff research associate in the Grinberg Lab Memory and Aging Center at the Weill Institute for Neurosciences at UCSF, told Healthline.

“Our lab was interested in looking at early pathological changes in the human Alzheimer’s disease brains, focusing on the brain stem and subcortical regions,” Oh added.

“These regions have been historically less focused on in Alzheimer’s disease research. However, we and several others have shown that these regions are highly involved in the disease pathogenesis,” he said.

Findings surprising and frightening

The new findings are in line with those of an earlier study by the Grinberg lab showing that people who died with elevated tau protein levels in their brain stem had already begun experiencing increased sleep disturbances as well as changes in mood such as anxiety and depression.

“I think the extent of substantial neuronal loss in the wake-promoting centers was very surprising and, in a way, frightening,” Oh said. “This is especially true because not just one type of neuron is affected, but an entire wake-promoting network.”

“This makes it difficult for the brain to compensate for the loss of function,” he explained. “It shows how devastating Alzheimer’s disease really is to a person’s brain at a microscopic level.”

Rong Zhang, PhD, director of the cerebrovascular laboratory at the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital and UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, did issue some cautionary words about the research.

“While current evidence from observational studies suggest poor sleep can increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, poor sleep isn’t necessarily an early sign,” Dr. Zhang told Healthline.

On the other hand, Dr. Steven Lin, DO, a board-certified neurologist specializing in neurology and sleep medicine at Healthcare Associates in Medicine in New York, said sleep and Alzheimer’s disease seem to be tied together.

“Poor sleep has also been associated with an increased risk of amyloid protein buildup in the brain, another protein associated with Alzheimer’s disease risk,” Lin told Healthline.

Alzheimer’s and sleep quality

Another recent study by psychologists at the University of California Berkeley, concluded that people in their 50s and 60s who report a declining quality of sleep also have more protein tangles in their brain.

The Berkeley researchers warn that getting enough sleep is important at every age to maintain cognitive health.

“Insufficient sleep across the lifespan is significantly predictive of your development of Alzheimer’s disease pathology in the brain,” Matthew Walker, PhD, the study’s senior author and a sleep researcher and professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, said in a statement.

“Unfortunately there’s no decade of life that we were able to measure during which you can get away with less sleep,” Dr. Walker said. “There’s no ‘Goldilocks decade’ during which you can say, ‘This is when I get my chance to short my sleep.’”

Whether poor sleep causes tau protein tangles or the tangles cause poor sleep still isn’t fully understood, but Lin said there are simple guidelines that can be followed to generally improve how well we sleep:

  • Make your bedroom an environment that’s conducive to sleep.
  • Go to bed and wake up at around the same time every day.
  • Engage in physical activity during the day, which can increase nighttime sleepiness.
  • Get adequate light exposure during the day.
  • Follow a healthy diet.

Sleep aids aren’t the solution

Over-the-counter sleep medications and some allergy drugs may not be the answer to sleep problems and could actually increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, according to past research.

2015 studyTrusted Source concluded that sleep aids such as Nyquil and certain anti-allergy medications contain diphenhydramine, a class of drug highlighted by the study’s researchers.

Drugs such as diphenhydramine are anticholinergic and block an important neurotransmitter called acetylcholine.

The findings suggest that at higher doses this may significantly increase the likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease or other forms of dementia over several years.

“We found that higher cumulative use of anticholinergic drugs is associated with an increased risk for all-cause dementia and Alzheimer’s disease,” the study authors wrote.

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