Study objectives: To identify the association between insomnia symptoms and signs of prodromal neurodegeneration, including an analysis of potential differences between sleep-onset and sleep-maintenance insomnia.
Methods: We included those aged 45-85 years, living in 1 of 10 Canadian provinces between 2012 and 2015 (at the baseline), recruited via 3 population-based sampling methods. Insomnia symptoms were assessed using questions adapted/modified from the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. A panel of potential prodromal neurodegenerative markers including self-reported symptoms and objective gait motor, cognitive, and autonomic variables were assessed cross sectionally. We compared those who endorsed insomnia symptoms ≥ 3 times per week to controls, adjusting for age, sex, and education via logistic regression.
Results: Overall, 2,051/30,097 people screened positive for sleep-onset insomnia alone and 4,333 for sleep-maintenance insomnia alone, while 2,371 endorsed both subtypes. On objective gait tests, participants with sleep-onset insomnia, but not sleep-maintenance insomnia, had worse balance (odds ratio [OR] = 1.33, 95% confidence interval = [1.16, 1.52]) and slower gait speed (OR = 1.52 [1.34, 1.73]). Although participants with any insomnia subtype endorsed more motor symptoms, these were more severe in those with sleep-onset insomnia (OR onset vs maintenance = 1.13 [1.07, 1.18]). On objective cognitive tests, those with sleep-maintenance insomnia scored normally. However, participants with sleep-onset insomnia performed worse on tests of verbal fluency (OR = 1.24 [1.06, 1.43]), immediate memory (OR = 1.23 [1.08, 1.41]), and prospective memory task (OR = 1.29 [1.11, 1.50]). The sleep-onset insomnia group also had lower heart rate variability (OR = 1.23 [1.07, 1.43]). Secondary analyses found generally similar results in young vs older age of insomnia development.
Conclusions: Compared to maintenance insomnia, those with sleep-onset insomnia have more motor, cognitive, and autonomic signs/symptoms. When evaluating neurodegenerative risk, differentiating insomnia subtypes may increase precision.
Citation: Yao CW, Pelletier A, Fereshtehnejad S-M, Cross N, Dang-Vu T, Postuma RB. Insomnia symptom subtypes and manifestations of prodromal neurodegeneration: a population-based study in the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging. J Clin Sleep Med. 2022;18(2):345-359.
Keywords: dementia; insomnia; movement disorder; neurodegeneration.
© 2022 American Academy of Sleep Medicine.