Identification of circadian-sensitive brain structure and its role in cognitive impairment and dementia

Background Circadian disruption has been suggested to induce cognitive impairment and dementia. It remains unknown which brain structures are involved in the pathology.Objective To investigate which specific brain structure alterations are associated with dementia and cognitive impairment induced by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qing Chen, Shengfeng Wang, Jia Cao, Siwen Luo, Yimeng Wang, Mengchao He, Qiaorui Wen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-05-01
Series:BMJ Mental Health
Online Access:https://mentalhealth.bmj.com/content/28/1/e301142.full
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Summary:Background Circadian disruption has been suggested to induce cognitive impairment and dementia. It remains unknown which brain structures are involved in the pathology.Objective To investigate which specific brain structure alterations are associated with dementia and cognitive impairment induced by circadian disruption.Methods Circadian disruption was represented by two accelerometer-derived circadian variables, composite phase deviations (CPD) and relative amplitude (RA), separately reflecting circadian disruption in timing and amplitude. The outcomes include brain structures (139 imaging-derived phenotypes), cognitive test performances (seven cognitive tests) and dementia (all-cause dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia (AD/VD) and non-AD/VD dementia). Association analysis was used to explore the relationships between circadian disruption and brain structure alterations, cognitive test performances and dementia. Mediation analysis was conducted to investigate which brain structure alterations mediated the cognitive impairment and dementia caused by circadian disruption.Findings A total of 88 461 participants (57% female, 62.0±7.8-year old) were included. CPD and RA correlated with substantially different brain structures. All CPD-related brain structures were located in the cerebrum, whereas most RA-related brain structures were located in the cerebellum. Furthermore, only the CPD-related brain structures, including the hippocampus and thalamus, exhibited significant mediation effects accounting for up to 8.6% of the risk for dementia and 13.5% of the risk for cognitive impairment.Conclusions Circadian disruption is associated with brain structural alterations involving dementia and cognitive impairments.Clinical implications These results provide a novel insight into the mechanism underlying circadian disruption-induced neurological disorder and may propose potential preventive strategy.
ISSN:2755-9734