Andrew W Varga1, Korey Kam1,2. 1. Mount Sinai Integrative Sleep Center Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine and. 2. Friedman Brain Institute Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York, New York.
Memory is classically divided into three phases: encoding of new
experiences, offline processing or consolidation of this information, and recall. An
abundance of evidence from the world of neurobiology suggests that sleep is crucial for
the offline processing phase. This potentially occurs through sleep
“replay” of the temporal firing pattern of neurons that occurred during
prior wakefulness, strengthening of synapses for information marked as salient while
weakening synapses for information marked as irrelevant, or distribution of information
heavily encoded by one brain area during encoding to additional brain areas (so-called
systems consolidation) (1–3). It therefore stands to reason that disruptions
to sleep would most strongly impact this offline processing phase of memory. Obstructive
sleep apnea (OSA), with its associated sleep fragmentation and intermittent hypoxia
during sleep, likely represents the most common clinical disorder through which memory
processing could be impacted. Although OSA can potentially also impact the encoding and
recall phases of memory, perhaps through effects on sleepiness or attention, the ability
to capture an effect of OSA on the offline processing phase can only occur using
sleep-dependent memory paradigms, in which the encoding and recall of information are
separated by a period of sleep that either does or does not contain OSA. Studies using
such sleep-dependent memory paradigms have shown deleterious effects of OSA on the
offline change in declarative (4), spatial
navigational (5), and motor memories (6) in comparison with conditions lacking OSA.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of studies on OSA and memory exclusively use tasks
occurring during daytime testing with no offline processing phase, including APPLES
(Apnea Positive Pressure Long-Term Efficacy Study) (7), one of the larger randomized controlled trials of positive airway
pressure (PAP) on primary cognitive outcomes.Thus, the research by Djonlagic and colleagues in this issue of the
Journal (pp. 1188–1190) is an important
contribution to the sleep apnea field, as the authors employ a sleep-dependent
declarative verbal paired-associates task involving the encoding and recall of word
pairs before and after sleep (8). The authors
first demonstrated in a case–control design that individuals with OSA
(apnea–hypopnea index [AHI] ≥ 5 events/h) display worse
overnight retention of word pairs than individuals without OSA
(AHI < 5 events/h). Then, individuals with OSA were randomized to
autotitrating PAP plus diet and exercise lifestyle modifications or diet and exercise
modifications alone. Three months after the intervention onset, individuals from both
groups returned for follow-up testing on the word-pair task as well as an in-laboratory
polysomnogram. Although the sample size was relatively small, this is the first study to
our knowledge that demonstrates a benefit of OSA treatment with PAP in a randomized
controlled trial on a primary memory outcome. In fact, overnight retention of word pairs
in those randomized to PAP was equivalent to that of control subjects without OSA.
Crucially, there were no differences in evening encoding of word pairs and no
differences in subjective measures of sleepiness during either the evening or morning in
subjects randomized to PAP versus the control condition, suggesting that PAP treatment
is most likely impacting the sleep-dependent processing phase of this memory.Next, the authors performed regression modeling from the case–control portion of
the study to identify sleep physiology factors predictive of the overnight change in
memory and found that time spent in slow-wave sleep (e.g., non-REM stage 3) represented
a significant predictor, whereas the oxygen saturation nadir, AHI, and arousal index did
not. In addition, in the clinical trial portion of the study, the increase in slow-wave
sleep on the PAP-treated night from the baseline night in those subjects randomized to
PAP significantly correlated with the overnight improvements in word-pair retention.
These findings are in agreement with observations suggesting that slow-wave sleep and
slow-wave activity are important predictors of offline memory processing in individuals
with (9) and without OSA (10, 11). Although the
inverse relationship between OSA severity and measures of slow-wave sleep is likely to
be nonlinear and age dependent (12), other
aspects of sleep neurophysiology, such as sleep spindle density (13), spindle–slow oscillation coupling (14), aspects of REM sleep (5) (bout length and theta oscillations), and the sequential
occurrence of non-REM and REM sleep (15) have
been postulated to be important in the processing of different types of memories and may
also be negatively impacted by OSA. Investigation of these other markers would only
increase the significance of the present study.Although we view the use of a sleep-dependent memory task as a key aspect of the success
of the randomized controlled trial of PAP in this study, there are at least two other
factors that likely also contributed. First, although no OSA severity inclusion criteria
were listed, average OSA severity was reasonably high, with a mean AHI of 34.7 events/h
and an oxygen saturation nadir of 78.5%. Second, PAP adherence in those randomized to
the PAP treatment arm was quite high at an average of 5.68 hours per night. Because
subjects were recruited from both the community and local sleep clinics, it is possible
that subjects recruited from the clinic randomized to PAP had an incentive to use PAP
that may not be present in populations recruited exclusively from the community with
incidentally identified OSA.One limitation of the study is that the memory outcomes in the clinical trial were
evaluated at a single time point (3 mo), and whether PAP benefits memory over longer
periods of time will be important to ascertain. The authors suggest that their findings
may have implications for cognitive decline pertaining to neurodegenerative disease.
Although this may be true, it is important to note that cognitive decline associated
with dementia contains both the inability to form new memories prospectively (as tested
here) and the deterioration of established memories. These are dissociable, and although
evidence exists that OSA can negatively impact both (16), testing whether PAP treatment slows the deterioration of established
memories will be challenging, may benefit from selection of at-risk individuals based on
biomarkers, and will likely require years of follow-up. Nonetheless, establishing a
benefit of PAP on the formation of new memories is an important and welcome first
step.
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