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Does Acoustic Stimulation During Sleep Boost Slow Wave Sleep and Memory Performance?

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Healthy
Mild Cognitive Impairment
Alzheimer Disease
Interventions
Other: Sham acoustic stimulation
Other: Closed loop acoustic stimulation
Registration Number
NCT04277104
Lead Sponsor
University of Bern
Brief Summary

With aging the amount of slow wave sleep decreases drastically and this disruption is markedly exaggerated in older adults suffering from mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease. Critically, the disruption of slow wave sleep and cognitive decline seem bidirectionally linked forming a vicious cycle. In the long run, improving slow wave sleep might be a useful intervention tool to delay the onset of cognitive decline. The present study aims at improving slow wave sleep and memory functions through a closed-loop acoustic stimulation approach. A closed-loop algorithm is used that detects slow waves in the electroencephalogram and is programmed to present short tones (50 ms) in the rhythm of these waves. This procedure has shown to boost both slow wave sleep as well as memory performance, mainly in young adults and when applied for one night. Here, the investigators apply tones via multiple consecutive nights and assess memory performance during this 3-night intervention.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
47
Inclusion Criteria
  • Written informed consent
  • Fluent in German
  • Normal or corrected to normal vision
  • Unimpaired hearing
  • For healthy group: Montreal Cognitive Assessment Score ≥ 26
  • For MCI group: Montreal Cognitive Assessment Score < 26
  • For at risk group: smoker, high cholesterol, high blood pressure and high fasting plasma glucose OR smoker, high BMI, physically inactive, unhealthy dietary habits
Exclusion Criteria
  • Known sleep problems such as Insomnia, restless leg syndrome, apnea
  • Irregular sleep pattern
  • Symptoms of depression
  • History of untreated severe neurological and psychiatric diseases
  • Alcohol or substance abuse
  • Use of medication acting on the central nervous system

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
At risk shamSham acoustic stimulationNo stimulation
Healthy shamSham acoustic stimulationNo stimulation
Healthy interventionClosed loop acoustic stimulationAcoustic stimulation
At risk interventionClosed loop acoustic stimulationAcoustic stimulation
MCI (mild cognitive impairment) interventionClosed loop acoustic stimulationAcoustic stimulation
MCI (mild cognitive impairment) shamSham acoustic stimulationNo stimulation
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change from baseline episodic memory performance after three nights of interventionThe change in memory performance will be assessed between the baseline measurement (evening before the first intervention night) and on the morning of the last intervention night (1 hour after waking), 3 days after initial encoding

Face-occupation associative memory task: encoding of 40 faces coupled with 40 occupations takes place on the evening of the first intervention night followed by a retrieval session (BASELINE). Feedback-based retrieval sessions take place on the following mornings and evenings of three consecutive intervention nights (4 feedback-based encoding sessions). After the last intervention night a retrieval session without feedback is performed upon waking (ASSESSMENT OF CHANGE)

Change from baseline performance in computer-based verbal new learning task (episodic memory) after three nights of interventionThe change in new learning performance will be assessed between the baseline measurement (morning before the first intervention night) and on the morning of the last intervention night (1.5 hour after waking), 3 days after.

Verbal associative memory task: a list of 30 moderately associated word pairs (e.g. balloon-air) are presented on a screen. The respective word pairs are displayed for five seconds each and participants are asked to memorize them. After a one-minute break, a cued recall follows in which one word of each pair is randomly shown and participants are prompted to name the matching second word (BASELINE). After the last intervention night a different list of 30 word pairs is used for another session of encoding and retrieval (ASSESSMENT OF CHANGE)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Improvements in sleep physiologyThree consecutive nights of EEG measurement/polysomnography

EEG-data: Quality of slow wave sleep, number of slow oscillations, number of sleep spindles can all be measured by the data provided by the electroencephalographic recordings. A high densitiy electrode cap with 128 channels is used for this purpose.

Improvement in new learning of episodic memory at follow-upsOne week as well as 3 months after intervention

Verbal associative memory task

Decreases in plasma amyloid-betaBlood samples will be taken twice: on the morning before the first intervention night, on the morning after the last intervention night (3 days apart)
Improvement in episodic memory performance at follow-upsOne week as well as 3 months after intervention

Face-occupation associative memory task

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University Hospital of Old Age Psychiatry and Psychotherapy

🇨🇭

Bern, Switzerland

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