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Nocturnal sleep enhances working memory training in Parkinson's disease but not Lewy body dementia
Author(s) -
Michael K. Scullin,
Lynn Marie Trotti,
Anthony G. Wilson,
Sophia A. Greer,
Donald L. Bliwise
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/aws192
Subject(s) - working memory , memory span , dementia with lewy bodies , dementia , polysomnography , parkinson's disease , psychology , working memory training , dopaminergic , audiology , neuroscience , sleep (system call) , lewy body , short term memory , cognition , medicine , physical medicine and rehabilitation , disease , electroencephalography , dopamine , computer science , operating system
Working memory is essential to higher order cognition (e.g. fluid intelligence) and to performance of daily activities. Though working memory capacity was traditionally thought to be inflexible, recent studies report that working memory capacity can be trained and that offline processes occurring during sleep may facilitate improvements in working memory performance. We utilized a 48-h in-laboratory protocol consisting of repeated digit span forward (short-term attention measure) and digit span backward (working memory measure) tests and overnight polysomnography to investigate the specific sleep-dependent processes that may facilitate working memory performance improvements in the synucleinopathies. We found that digit span backward performance improved following a nocturnal sleep interval in patients with Parkinson's disease on dopaminergic medication, but not in those not taking dopaminergic medication and not in patients with dementia with Lewy bodies. Furthermore, the improvements in patients with Parkinson's disease on dopaminergic medication were positively correlated with the amount of slow-wave sleep that patients obtained between training sessions and negatively correlated with severity of nocturnal oxygen desaturation. The translational implication is that working memory capacity is potentially modifiable in patients with Parkinson's disease but that sleep disturbances may first need to be corrected.

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