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Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations

Prospective memory (PM) is essential in everyday life because it concerns the ability to remember to perform an intended action in the future. This ability could be influenced by poor sleep quality, the role of which, however, is still being debated. To examine the role of sleep quality in PM in dep...

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Autores principales: Tonetti, Lorenzo, Occhionero, Miranda, Boreggiani, Michele, Conca, Andreas, Dondi, Paola, Elbaz, Maxime, Fabbri, Marco, Gauriau, Caroline, Giupponi, Giancarlo, Leger, Damien, Martoni, Monica, Rafanelli, Chiara, Roncuzzi, Renzo, Zoppello, Marina, Natale, Vincenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7503383/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32842672
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17176113
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author Tonetti, Lorenzo
Occhionero, Miranda
Boreggiani, Michele
Conca, Andreas
Dondi, Paola
Elbaz, Maxime
Fabbri, Marco
Gauriau, Caroline
Giupponi, Giancarlo
Leger, Damien
Martoni, Monica
Rafanelli, Chiara
Roncuzzi, Renzo
Zoppello, Marina
Natale, Vincenzo
author_facet Tonetti, Lorenzo
Occhionero, Miranda
Boreggiani, Michele
Conca, Andreas
Dondi, Paola
Elbaz, Maxime
Fabbri, Marco
Gauriau, Caroline
Giupponi, Giancarlo
Leger, Damien
Martoni, Monica
Rafanelli, Chiara
Roncuzzi, Renzo
Zoppello, Marina
Natale, Vincenzo
author_sort Tonetti, Lorenzo
collection PubMed
description Prospective memory (PM) is essential in everyday life because it concerns the ability to remember to perform an intended action in the future. This ability could be influenced by poor sleep quality, the role of which, however, is still being debated. To examine the role of sleep quality in PM in depth, we decided to perform a retrospective naturalistic study examining different clinical populations with a primary sleep disorder or comorbid low sleep quality. If sleep is important for PM function, we could expect poor sleep to affect PM performance tasks both directly and indirectly. We examined a total of 3600 nights, recorded using actigraphy in participants belonging to the following groups: primary insomnia (731 nights); narcolepsy type 1 (1069 nights); attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (152 nights in children and 239 in adults); severe obesity (232 nights); essential hypertension (226 nights); menopause (143 nights); healthy controls (808 nights). In a naturalistic activity-based PM task, each participant originally wore an actigraph around the non-dominant wrist and was requested to push the event-marker button at two specific times of day: bedtime (activity 1) and get-up time (activity 2). Each clinical group showed significantly lower sleep quality in comparison to the control group. However, only narcolepsy type 1 patients presented a significantly impaired PM performance at get-up time, remembering to push the event-marker button around half the time compared not only to healthy controls but also to the other clinical groups. Overall, the present results seem to point to sleep quality having no effect on the efficiency of a naturalistic activity-based PM task. Moreover, the data indicated that narcolepsy type 1 patients may show a disease-specific cognitive deficit of PM.
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spelling pubmed-75033832020-09-23 Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations Tonetti, Lorenzo Occhionero, Miranda Boreggiani, Michele Conca, Andreas Dondi, Paola Elbaz, Maxime Fabbri, Marco Gauriau, Caroline Giupponi, Giancarlo Leger, Damien Martoni, Monica Rafanelli, Chiara Roncuzzi, Renzo Zoppello, Marina Natale, Vincenzo Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Prospective memory (PM) is essential in everyday life because it concerns the ability to remember to perform an intended action in the future. This ability could be influenced by poor sleep quality, the role of which, however, is still being debated. To examine the role of sleep quality in PM in depth, we decided to perform a retrospective naturalistic study examining different clinical populations with a primary sleep disorder or comorbid low sleep quality. If sleep is important for PM function, we could expect poor sleep to affect PM performance tasks both directly and indirectly. We examined a total of 3600 nights, recorded using actigraphy in participants belonging to the following groups: primary insomnia (731 nights); narcolepsy type 1 (1069 nights); attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (152 nights in children and 239 in adults); severe obesity (232 nights); essential hypertension (226 nights); menopause (143 nights); healthy controls (808 nights). In a naturalistic activity-based PM task, each participant originally wore an actigraph around the non-dominant wrist and was requested to push the event-marker button at two specific times of day: bedtime (activity 1) and get-up time (activity 2). Each clinical group showed significantly lower sleep quality in comparison to the control group. However, only narcolepsy type 1 patients presented a significantly impaired PM performance at get-up time, remembering to push the event-marker button around half the time compared not only to healthy controls but also to the other clinical groups. Overall, the present results seem to point to sleep quality having no effect on the efficiency of a naturalistic activity-based PM task. Moreover, the data indicated that narcolepsy type 1 patients may show a disease-specific cognitive deficit of PM. MDPI 2020-08-22 2020-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7503383/ /pubmed/32842672 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17176113 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tonetti, Lorenzo
Occhionero, Miranda
Boreggiani, Michele
Conca, Andreas
Dondi, Paola
Elbaz, Maxime
Fabbri, Marco
Gauriau, Caroline
Giupponi, Giancarlo
Leger, Damien
Martoni, Monica
Rafanelli, Chiara
Roncuzzi, Renzo
Zoppello, Marina
Natale, Vincenzo
Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations
title Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations
title_full Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations
title_fullStr Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations
title_full_unstemmed Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations
title_short Sleep and Prospective Memory: A Retrospective Study in Different Clinical Populations
title_sort sleep and prospective memory: a retrospective study in different clinical populations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7503383/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32842672
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17176113
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