The Sleep-Heart-Brain Connection: Sex-Specific Modifiable Risk Factors and Cognitive Impact in Mid-to-Late Life
Ashley Curtis, Amy Costa, Natasa Billeci

TL;DR
The study explores how poor sleep and cardiovascular health interact to affect cognitive function differently in men and women.
Contribution
It identifies sex-specific interactions between sleep health and cardiovascular risk factors impacting attention in older adults.
Findings
In men, worse cardiovascular risk scores are linked to poorer attention with poor sleep quality.
This association is not observed in women.
Sex-specific monitoring of cardiovascular and sleep health is recommended.
Abstract
Poor sleep and cardiovascular health are considered modifiable risk factors of cognitive decline. How these functions interact in associations with cognition, and whether there are sex differences in patterns of association remains underexplored. The present study evaluated sex-specific interactive patterns of sleep health and cardiovascular risk factors on cognition in mid-to-late life. Middle-aged and older adults (N = 270; 124 women; Mage=64.5±7.8) completed measures of sleep health [(Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI)], medical history and demographics (including biological sex, BMI), substance use (Alcohol Use Identification Test, smoking history), and self-reported cognition (Cognitive Failures Questionnaire). A subset of participants (n = 67) completed objective cognitive tasks (Posner Cueing Task, Sternberg Working Memory Task, Stroop Task). Moderation analyses examined sex…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue · Sleep and Wakefulness Research
