Pink noise boosts deep sleep in mild cognitive impairment patients

sleep
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Gentle sound stimulation played during specific times during deep sleep enhanced deep or slow-wave sleep for people with mild cognitive impairment, who are at risk for Alzheimer's disease.

The individuals whose brains responded the most robustly to the showed an improved response the following day.

"Our findings suggest slow-wave or is a viable and potentially important therapeutic target in people with ," said Dr. Roneil Malkani, assistant professor of neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a Northwestern Medicine sleep medicine physician. "The results deepen our understanding of the importance of sleep in memory, even when there is ."

Deep sleep is critical for . Several sleep disturbances have been observed in people with mild cognitive impairment. The most pronounced changes include reduced amount of time spent in the deepest stage of sleep.

"There is a great need to identify new targets for treatment of mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease," Malkani added. Northwestern scientists had previously shown that stimulation improved memory in in a 2017 study.

Because the new study was small—nine participants—and some individuals responded more robustly than others, the improvement in memory was not considered statistically significant. However, there was a significant relationship between the enhancement of deep sleep by sound and memory: the greater the deep sleep enhancement, the better the memory response. 

"These results suggest that improving sleep is a promising novel approach to stave off dementia," Malkani said.

The paper will be published June 28 in the Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology.

For the study, Northwestern scientists conducted a trial of sound stimulation overnight in people with mild cognitive impairment. Participants spent one night in the sleep laboratory and another night there about one week later. Each participant received sounds on one of the nights and no sounds on the other. The order of which night had sounds or no sounds was randomly assigned.  Participants did memory testing the night before and again in the morning. Scientists then compared the difference in with sound stimulation and without sounds, and the change in memory across both nights for each participant.

The participants were tested on their recall of 44 word pairs. The individuals who had 20% or more increase in their slow wave activity after the sound stimulation recalled about two more words in the memory test the next morning. One person with a 40% increase in slow wave activity remembered nine more words.

The sound stimulation consisted of short pulses of pink noise, similar to white noise but deeper, during the slow waves. The system monitored the participant's brain activity. When the person was asleep and slow brain waves were seen, the system delivered the sounds. If the patient woke up, the sounds stopped playing.

"As a potential treatment, this would be something people could do every night," Malkani said.

The next step, when funding is available, is to evaluate pink noise stimulation in a larger sample of people with mild cognitive impairment over multiple nights to confirm memory enhancement and see how long the effect lasts, Malkani said.  

Citation: Pink noise boosts deep sleep in mild cognitive impairment patients (2019, June 28) retrieved 23 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-06-pink-noise-boosts-deep-mild.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Sound waves boost older adult' memory, deep sleep

2 shares

Feedback to editors