Week 6: Physical Activity, Sleep, and Cognitive Health Flashcards

1
Q

What is the preclinical period?

A

The stage of disease where biomarker changes are observed, but they are not yet observable cognitive symptoms.

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2
Q

What are the 4 stages of sleep called?

A

NREM Stages 1-3 and REM Sleep

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3
Q

What is NREM Stage 1?

A

The transition period between wakefulness and sleep which lasts around 5 to 10 minutes.

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4
Q

What is NREM Stage 2?

A
  • When the body temperature drops and the heart rate begins to slow
  • The brain also begins to produce sleep spindles
  • Lasts around 20 minutes
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5
Q

What is NREM Stage 3?

A
  • Muscles relax and blood pressure and breathing rate drop
  • Deepest sleep occurs
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6
Q

What is REM Sleep?

A
  • Brain becomes more active , body becomes relaxed and immobilised
  • Dreams occur
  • Eyes move rapidly
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7
Q

List the objective measures of measuring sleep.

A
  • Accelerometer based measures, e.g. FitBit - produces data about how long an individual’s spend either sleeping or doing physical activity
  • Polysomnography (use EEG and other sensors to detect brain waves and movement throughout the night)
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8
Q

How is sleep measured subjectively?

A
  • Self-reported questionnaire
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9
Q

List the aspects of sleep quality that are objectively-assessed.

A
  • Sleep latency
  • Sleep duration
  • Sleep efficiency
  • Wake after sleep onset
  • Time spent in sleep stages
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10
Q

List the aspects of sleep that are subjectively-assessed.

A
  • Subjective sleep quality
  • Sleep latency
  • Sleep duration
  • Sleep efficiency
  • Sleep disturbances
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11
Q

What is sleep latency?

A

How long it takes a person to fall asleep after they’re in bed.

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12
Q

Give a few effects of sleep deprivation on cognition.

A
  • Decline in working memory
  • Impaired performance on attention-intensive tasks
  • Increased incidence of microsleeps
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13
Q

What is the most commonly examined metric of sleep quality?

A

Sleep duration

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14
Q

How do we examine sleep and physical
activity together?

A
  • Observe joint effects, each participant is categorised based on both their sleep and physical activity behaviours
  • Isotemporal substitution methods: the effect on cognitive performance when a participant substitutes one movement behaviour for another
  • Clinical trials: participants are assigned to receive a
    combination physical activity and sleeping intervention to see the effect on cognitive health
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15
Q

How do we study sleep, physical activity,
and cognitive health?

A
  • Cross-sectional studies (measure cognitive performance and prevalent dementia)
  • Longitudinal studies (measure cognitive performance and decline and incident dementia)
  • Clinical trials (measure cognitive performance or decline and incident dementia or reduction of dementia symptoms)
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16
Q

What are the advantages of using cross-sectional studies to measure sleep, physical activity and cognitive performance at the same time?

A

Cheaper and straightforward analysis

17
Q

What are the disadvantages of using cross-sectional studies to measure sleep, physical activity and cognitive performance at the same time?

A

Not possible to establish temporality

18
Q

What are the advantages of using longitudinal studies to measure sleep, physical activity and cognitive performance at the same time?

A
  • Can measure cognitive decline in addition to cognitive performance
  • Able to establish direction of temporality
  • Can examine incident dementia
19
Q

What are the disadvantages of using longitudinal studies to measure sleep, physical activity and cognitive performance at the same time?

A

Generally requires 10+ years of data to meaningfully examine cognitive decline or dementia

20
Q
A