How might a disrupted circadian rhythm affect brain health?

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Staying more active during the day may protect brain health as we age, a new study suggests. Image credit: Christine La/Stocksy
  • A person’s circadian rhythm plays an important role in their overall health.
  • Past research shows that an unhealthy circadian rhythm may increase a person’s risk for several health conditions, including dementia, such as Alzheimer’s disease.
  • A new study found that older adults with a more fragmented circadian rest-activity rhythm experienced more shrinking of the brain in areas typically affected by Alzheimer’s disease.

A person’s circadian rhythm — or natural sleep-wake cycle — plays an important role in their overall health. A healthy circadian rhythm helps ensure you get enough sleep each night, keeps your immune system strong, balances hormones, and regulates your metabolism.

Past research shows that a disrupted circadian rhythm may increase a person’s risk for several health conditions, including cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease.

A new study published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association has found that older adults with a more fragmented circadian rest-activity rhythm may lead to shrinking of the brain, or brain atrophy, in areas associated with memory and emotion that are typically affected by Alzheimer’s disease.

For this study, researchers analyzed health data from 344 adult participants with an average age of 73 with no signs of cognitive impairment who participated in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging.

Study participants were asked to wear a wrist accelerometer for up to a week to measure their 24-hour rest/activity rhythms, including movement and inactivity, and also had MRI scans taken of three areas of the brain generally affected by Alzheimer’s disease — the parahippocampal gyrus, hippocampus, and Health">amygdala.

“While disturbed sleep has been linked to poor brain health outcomes, much less is known about how rest-activity rhythms are related to changes in brain structure over time,” Adam Spira, PhD, professor in the Department of Mental Health at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, and senior author of this study, told Medical News Today.

“We wanted to better understand these associations using MRI measures of brain volume,” said Spira.

Data from the wrist accelerometers allowed scientists to measure how fragmented each participant’s daily rest-activity rhythm was.

“Fragmented rhythms refer to how often a person switches between activity and rest throughout the day,” Marc Kaizi-Lutu, a doctoral researcher in the Department of Mental Health at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, and co-first author of this study, explained to MNT.

“Someone with more fragmented rhythms tends to more frequently shift between being active and inactive, while someone with less fragmentation has longer, more sustained periods of activity or rest,” Kaizi-Lutu continued.

At the study’s conclusion, researchers found that study participants with less fragmented daily rest-activity rhythms had larger volumes in the memory-associated brain areas the hippocampus and parahippocampus, and less shrinkage of the amygdala, which is vital for emotion.

“These brain regions are particularly vulnerable in Alzheimer’s disease,” Daniel Callow, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and co-first author of this study, told MNT.

“Our findings show that individuals with less fragmented and more consistent rest-activity rhythms tend to have larger volumes in these areas and experience less shrinkage of the amygdala over time. Importantly, the longitudinal findings suggest that disrupted rhythms may precede change in brain structure, raising the possibility that more fragmented or less consistent RARs contribute to neurodegeneration.”

– Daniel Callow, PhD

Additionally, scientists observed a correlation between a more fragmented rest-activity rhythm with a quicker increase in the volume of brain ventricles.

“Brain ventricles are fluid-filled spaces that often expand as surrounding brain tissue is lost,” Callow said. “Thus, our finding suggests that more fragmented rest-activity rhythms are associated with faster increases in ventricular size over time, which suggests a link between disrupted daily rhythms and more widespread brain atrophy.”

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