Cognitive Impairment Risk in Subjective Cognitive Decline: Roles of Sleep, Physical Frailty, and Their Interaction
Jing Huang, Katie Stone, Chakra Budhathoki, Junxin Li

TL;DR
This study explores how sleep issues and physical frailty affect the risk of cognitive decline in older adults who feel their memory is worsening.
Contribution
The study reveals that physical frailty is a strong predictor of cognitive impairment, and sleep issues have a stronger effect in non-frail individuals.
Findings
Physical prefrailty/frailty increases the risk of cognitive impairment and dementia.
Sleep disturbance's impact on cognition is stronger in non-frail older adults.
There is a significant interaction between sleep disturbance and frailty status.
Abstract
Subjective cognitive decline (SCD)—a self-perceived decline in cognition without objective impairment—may signal early Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. Sleep disturbances and physical frailty are linked to cognitive decline, but their roles in the progression from SCD to objective cognitive impairment and dementia, and their potential interaction, remain unclear. This study examined the associations of sleep disturbance, physical frailty, and their interaction with incident cognitive impairment and dementia over a 10-year follow-up period using six waves of Health and Retirement Study (HRS) data (2010–2020). While analysis on sleep used all 3,014 individuals with SCD at baseline, analyses involving frailty data included a subsample of 1,141. Sleep disturbance was assessed using the modified Jenkins Sleep Scale, and physical prefrailty/frailty was defined by the Fried frailty phenotype.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Frailty in Older Adults · Older Adults Driving Studies
