Objective and subjective sleep quality in Amnestic andNon-Amnestic Elderly Patients: is a subjective report from thepatient an accurate?
Recommended Citation
Gumenyuk V, Roth T, Korzyukov O, Miller N, Jones T, Rizzo M, Murman DL. Objective and subjective sleep quality in Amnestic andNon-Amnestic Elderly Patients: is a subjective report from thepatient an accurate?. Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association 2024; 20(S3):e092414.
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
12-1-2024
Publication Title
Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sleep disturbances and cognitive impairments, especially memory deficiency are one of the most common complications affecting everyday life in patient diagnosed with neurodegenerative disorder. Clinically evaluated, specific cognitive processes can be grouped into two categories: amnestic functions (AMN, clinically memory impairments) and non-amnestic functions (n-AMN, cognitive impairments non-memory related). To date, no cure treatments are available for AMN / n-AMN patients, therefore maintaining the well-being and an adequate sleep quality of people who are in prodromal state (i.e., AMN or n-AMN is a high priority for society general and for the patient / family specifical. In this study, we compared objective sleep results to self-reported sleep in AMN and n-AMN groups with respect to healthy matched controls to investigate whether the self-reported sleep results are accurate METHOD: Sleep disturbances and cognitive impairments, especially memory deficiency are one of the most common complications affecting everyday life in patient diagnosed with neurodegenerative disorder. Clinically evaluated, specific cognitive processes can be grouped into two categories: amnestic functions (AMN, clinically memory impairments) and non-amnestic functions (n-AMN, cognitive impairments non-memory related). To date, no cure treatments are available for AMN / n-AMN patients, therefore maintaining the well-being and an adequate sleep quality of people who are in prodromal state (i.e., AMN or n-AMN is a high priority for society general and for the patient / family specifical. In this study, we compared objective sleep results to self-reported sleep in AMN and n-AMN groups with respect to healthy matched controls to investigate whether the self-reported sleep results are accurate RESULT: Table summarizes all results found in the study. AMN group showed lower score in cognitive memory related processes (Craft story and Benson figure recall), as compared to n-AMN and Healthy groups. Both patient groups overestimated their SE in self-report data as compared to SE in objective actigraphy data. In healthy group, the SE was accurately self-reported (see Figure). CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that regardless of the severity of memory impairments objective measure of sleep should be implemented for clinical evaluation.
Volume
20
Issue
S3
First Page
e092414
