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Age-related decrease in cortical excitability circadian variations during sleep loss and its links with cognition.

Age-related decrease in cortical excitability circadian variations during sleep loss and its links with cognition.
Age-related decrease in cortical excitability circadian variations during sleep loss and its links with cognition.
Cortical excitability depends on sleep-wake regulation, is central to cognition, and has been implicated in age-related cognitive decline. The dynamics of cortical excitability during prolonged wakefulness in aging are unknown, however. Here, we repeatedly probed cortical excitability of the frontal cortex using transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroencephalography in 13 young and 12 older healthy participants during sleep deprivation. Although overall cortical excitability did not differ between age groups, the magnitude of cortical excitability variations during prolonged wakefulness was dampened in older individuals. This age-related dampening was associated with mitigated neurobehavioral consequences of sleep loss on executive functions. Furthermore, higher cortical excitability was potentially associated with better and lower executive performance, respectively, in older and younger adults. The dampening of cortical excitability dynamics found in older participants likely arises from a reduced impact of sleep homeostasis and circadian processes. It may reflect reduced brain adaptability underlying reduced cognitive flexibility in aging. Future research should confirm preliminary associations between cortical excitability and behavior and address whether maintaining cortical excitability dynamics can counteract age-related cognitive decline.

0197-4580
52-63
Gaggioni, G
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Ly, JQM
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Muto, V
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Chellappa, SL
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Jaspar, M
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Meyer, C
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Delfosse, T
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Vanvinckenroye, A
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Dumont, R
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Coppieters, 't Wallant D
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Berthomier, C
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Vandewalle, G
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Narbutas, Justinas
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Egroo, Maxime Van
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Luxen, Andé
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Salmon, Eric
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Collette, Fabienne
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Phillips, Christophe
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Schmidt, Christina
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Gaggioni, G
32062755-d193-452c-a698-af3bd908f816
Ly, JQM
4d445e91-40fa-44d4-85ea-618eea80e23f
Muto, V
ce7ba591-3383-4fa3-ab02-edc341c35eb9
Chellappa, SL
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Jaspar, M
329c9b0a-cdd3-435b-8cd5-0fe47900000f
Meyer, C
58af247c-0c51-4872-bb9c-3384fbf8d3a2
Delfosse, T
14df7291-36b7-491f-b5b8-7237a3e29415
Vanvinckenroye, A
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Dumont, R
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Coppieters, 't Wallant D
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Berthomier, C
cba6bd17-af17-4f4c-9bea-4a42450ebf1d
Vandewalle, G
26e86381-f07d-41ae-ae39-debbfd10013b
Narbutas, Justinas
700029ba-f90c-458a-bc26-204d33407427
Egroo, Maxime Van
0768d7e2-fbae-45ee-ac0b-b02e18d30afb
Luxen, Andé
e4cf8c17-64ae-46c6-a16c-d5f4b455ba76
Salmon, Eric
f2de2fe7-5836-4cc5-a16a-6530fcab9188
Collette, Fabienne
9d02dacc-cec9-45c1-9c4e-52f3c9fb4c80
Phillips, Christophe
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Schmidt, Christina
f97ad7fd-94ce-4a6f-8320-d8c0374ca0bf

Gaggioni, G, Ly, JQM, Muto, V, Chellappa, SL, Jaspar, M, Meyer, C, Delfosse, T, Vanvinckenroye, A, Dumont, R, Coppieters, 't Wallant D, Berthomier, C, Vandewalle, G, Narbutas, Justinas, Egroo, Maxime Van, Luxen, Andé, Salmon, Eric, Collette, Fabienne, Phillips, Christophe and Schmidt, Christina (2019) Age-related decrease in cortical excitability circadian variations during sleep loss and its links with cognition. Neurobiology of Aging, 78, 52-63. (doi:10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2019.02.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Cortical excitability depends on sleep-wake regulation, is central to cognition, and has been implicated in age-related cognitive decline. The dynamics of cortical excitability during prolonged wakefulness in aging are unknown, however. Here, we repeatedly probed cortical excitability of the frontal cortex using transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroencephalography in 13 young and 12 older healthy participants during sleep deprivation. Although overall cortical excitability did not differ between age groups, the magnitude of cortical excitability variations during prolonged wakefulness was dampened in older individuals. This age-related dampening was associated with mitigated neurobehavioral consequences of sleep loss on executive functions. Furthermore, higher cortical excitability was potentially associated with better and lower executive performance, respectively, in older and younger adults. The dampening of cortical excitability dynamics found in older participants likely arises from a reduced impact of sleep homeostasis and circadian processes. It may reflect reduced brain adaptability underlying reduced cognitive flexibility in aging. Future research should confirm preliminary associations between cortical excitability and behavior and address whether maintaining cortical excitability dynamics can counteract age-related cognitive decline.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 13 March 2019
Published date: June 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479726
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479726
ISSN: 0197-4580
PURE UUID: 1a17b5b4-42c2-42b5-bb08-02e2912e56e6
ORCID for SL Chellappa: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6190-464X

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: G Gaggioni
Author: JQM Ly
Author: V Muto
Author: SL Chellappa ORCID iD
Author: M Jaspar
Author: C Meyer
Author: T Delfosse
Author: A Vanvinckenroye
Author: R Dumont
Author: 't Wallant D Coppieters
Author: C Berthomier
Author: G Vandewalle
Author: Justinas Narbutas
Author: Maxime Van Egroo
Author: Andé Luxen
Author: Eric Salmon
Author: Fabienne Collette
Author: Christophe Phillips
Author: Christina Schmidt

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