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JCSM - Article Abstract

Volume : 05
Issue : 06
Pages : 540-548



SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS
Memory Before and After Sleep in Patients with Moderate Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Corinna Kloepfer, Ph.D.1; Dieter Riemann, Ph.D.1; Eric A. Nofzinger, M.D.2; Bernd Feige, Ph.D.1; Josef Unterrainer, Ph.D.3; Ruth O’Hara, Ph.D.4; Stephan Sorichter, M.D.5; Christoph Nissen, M.D.1

1Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Freiburg, Germany; 2Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA; 3Department of Psychology, University of Freiburg, Germany; 4Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford University, CA; 5Department of Pneumology, University Medical Center Freiburg, Germany



Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) on procedural and declarative memory encoding in the evening prior to sleep, on memory consolidation during subsequent sleep, and on retrieval in the morning after sleep.
Methods: Memory performance (procedural mirror-tracing task, declarative visual and verbal memory task) and general neuropsychological performance were assessed before and after one night of polysomnographic monitoring in 15 patients with moderate OSA and 20 age-, sex-, and IQ-matched healthy subjects.
Results: Encoding levels prior to sleep were similar across groups for all tasks. Conventional analyses of averaged mirror tracing performance suggested a significantly reduced overnight improvement in OSA patients. Single trial analyses, however, revealed that this effect was due to significantly flattened learning curves in the evening and morning session in OSA patients. OSA patients showed a significantly lower verbal retention rate and a non-significantly reduced visual retention rate after sleep compared to healthy subjects. Polysomnography revealed a significantly reduced REM density, increased frequency of micro-arousals, elevated apnea-hypopnea index, and subjectively disturbed sleep quality in OSA patients compared to healthy subjects.
Conclusions: The results suggest that moderate OSA is associated with a significant impairment of procedural and verbal declarative memory. Future work is needed to further determine the contribution of structural or functional alterations in brain circuits relevant for memory, and to test whether OSA treatment improves or normalizes the observed deficits in learning.
Keywords: Obstructive sleep apnea, memory, plasticity, procedural, declarative