Objectives
Evaluate differences in sleep characteristics between older adults with and
without mild Alzheimer’s disease using waist-worn actigraphy monitors.
Methods
Actigraph GT3X+ monitors and self-reported sleep and activity logs were used
for one week and compared between older adults (N = 85) with (n = 35) and
without Alzheimer’s disease (n = 51).
Results
Participants with Alzheimer’s disease had greater total sleep time and spent
more time in bed than nonimpaired older adults. Estimates for sleep
efficiency and total sleep time for the total sample were elevated compared
to previous studies of wrist-worn devices in similar populations, while
estimates of sleep onset latency and wake after sleep onset for the total
sample were lower.
Conclusions
Actigraphy-based sleep studies in older adults with Alzheimer’s disease
should consider discrepancies between objective and subjective estimates of
sleep and monitor placement to maximize the ability to measure both activity
and sleep.
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