African-Americans (AAs) have an increased prevalence of both Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular risk factors for AD such as diabetes and hypertension when compared to whites. However, in a recent community based study of non-demented elderly, black race was associated with higher amyloid burden after adjusting for vascular risk factors, suggesting the presence of additional physiological differences on AD-risk by race in the early stages of the disease. The purpose of this study is to test whether poor slow wave sleep (SWS) quantity (SWS duration) and quality (slow wave activity, SWA) is one of these physiological factors. To test these hypotheses, the investigators will perform community outreach in churches and community-based organizations in Brooklyn and other NYC boroughs with which we have created substantial ties in recent years. In consultation with community stakeholders, the investigators will recruit 150 cognitively normal AA elderly (age 60-75) and 60 age, sex, BMI, income and education matched non-Hispanic whites from the same geographical areas. Investigators will first perform a medical and cognitive evaluation (Visit 1). Participants will then undergo 2 nights of home sleep monitoring using an unattended device to exclude OSA, followed by 7 days of actigraphy with a sleep log to record sleep duration. Both devices will be returned by mail. Subjects with reported total sleep time (TST) between 5 and 10 hours and absence of moderate to severe OSA will be invited to perform a 2-night nocturnal polysomnography (NPSG) (Nights 1-2) and a PiB-PET MR scan (Visit 2).
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
210
Participants will undergo PET-MR scans at baseline and two-year follow up to examine brain amyloid deposition longitudinally.
Subjects will receive a single dose of 555 MBq of PiB and perform a dynamic 30 min PiB PET-MR scan 60 min after injection.
NYU Center for Brain Health
New York, New York, United States
Association between Percentage of African Ancestry (%AF) and Slow Wave Sleep (SWS) duration and activity (SWA).
Aim 1 will test if individual % African ancestry (%AF), estimated from 0-100 and computed using a maximum likelihood method for inferring individual admixture based upon allele frequencies ascertained from Utah residents with Northern and Western European ancestry and West African samples, is associated with short SWS duration/ and poor slow wave activity (SWA), determined through polysomnography, in older AAs while controlling for other moderating factors.
Time frame: Determined at baseline.
Examine association between SWS duration and poor SWA with longitudinal change in amyloid burden.
Aim 2 will test the effect of race and its interaction with baseline SWS duration and SWA with amyloid plaque burden both at baseline and follow-up by determining mean PiB standard uptake value using PET-MR.
Time frame: Baseline and 2.5 year follow-up
Examine the association between race, SWS duration and poor SWA and cognition using both standardized and sleep-dependent cognitive tests at baseline and follow-up.
Aim 3 will test the effect of race and baseline SWS duration and poor SWA on overall cognition using standardized and sleep-dependent tests: the UDS 3.0, WHICAP Clinical Core Neuropsychological test battery, as well as a 3-D Virtual Maze Task, both at baseline and follow-up.
Time frame: Baseline and 2.5 year follow-up
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