2016
DOI: 10.1590/s1980-5764-2016dn1003004
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Sleep and executive functions in older adults: A systematic review

Abstract: Introduction: A recent increase in studies suggests a role of age-related sleep changes in executive functions (EF). However, this relationship remains unclear and mixed results have emerged. Objective: To investigate how age-related sleep changes may play an important role in the extent to which healthy older adults exhibit decline in EF. Methods: A systematic strategy was employed to identify the available literature on age-related sleep changes and EF. Results: Of the 465 studies identified, 26 were include… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(129 reference statements)
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“…Although increases in intra-individual variability (i.e., greater cognitive fluctuations) can be indicative of cognitive declines (Gamaldo & Allaire, 2016), even healthy older adults experience greater EF fluctuations than younger adults (Strauss, MacDonald, Hunter, Moll, & Hultsch, 2019). Such fluctuations can be exacerbated by a variety of contextual factors, such as experience of pain, quality of sleep, and engagement in burdensome emotion regulation (e.g., Franchow & Suchy, 2017;Higgins, Martin, Baker, Vasterling, & Risbrough, 2017;Holanda, de Almondes, & Almondes, 2016;Niermeyer & Suchy, 2020a).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although increases in intra-individual variability (i.e., greater cognitive fluctuations) can be indicative of cognitive declines (Gamaldo & Allaire, 2016), even healthy older adults experience greater EF fluctuations than younger adults (Strauss, MacDonald, Hunter, Moll, & Hultsch, 2019). Such fluctuations can be exacerbated by a variety of contextual factors, such as experience of pain, quality of sleep, and engagement in burdensome emotion regulation (e.g., Franchow & Suchy, 2017;Higgins, Martin, Baker, Vasterling, & Risbrough, 2017;Holanda, de Almondes, & Almondes, 2016;Niermeyer & Suchy, 2020a).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Microstructural abnormalities in limbic structures such as the amygdala, hippocampus, and fornix may disturb communication between sleep circuitry and memory consolidation networks, possibly explaining well-documented links between poor sleep quality and memory decline ( Cruz et al, 2019 ). Furthermore, ATR and SCS fibers projecting from the thalamus and striatum to frontal neocortex may facilitate the link between sleep-regulating circuitry ( Vetrivelan et al, 2010 ) and frontal regions involved in higher-order cognitive functions such as executive function, for which sleep plays a crucial supportive role by preserving the structural integrity of frontal networks ( Holanda and de Almondes, 2016 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, there are likely undetected moderators which partially determine whether a given participant's performance is influenced by a given psychosocial context variable or sleep, which are important to further investigate considering how pervasive the influence of these psychosocial context variables and sleep are on cognition. Considering the well-documented negative impact of disrupted sleep (Holanda Júnior and de Almondes, 2016;Lo et al, 2016;Rana et al, 2018;Zavecz et al, 2020) and high stress (Shields et al, 2016;Plieger and Reuter, 2020) on cognitively demanding tasks in the real world, understanding what variables may moderate this relationship is of substantial real-world importance. The results of the present study indicate that sleep and the psychosocial context variables examined in this study can have an impact on the performance and learning of complex tasks, which is warranted enough for further investigation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%