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| Professor Elizabeth Coulson said the findings suggest CPAP treatment of obstructive sleep apnea has the potential to reduce dementia risk. Credit: University of Queensland |
Researchers at The University of Queensland have discovered a link between obstructive sleep apnea and an increased risk of developing dementia.
Professor Elizabeth Coulson from UQ’s Queensland Brain Institute and School of Biomedical Sciences and her team found a causal relationship between a lack of oxygen to the brain during sleep and Alzheimer’s disease in mice.
“We found sleep deprivation alone in mice caused only mild cognitive impairment,” Professor Coulson said.
“But we developed a novel way to induce sleep-disrupted breathing and found the mice displayed exacerbated pathological features of Alzheimer’s disease.
“It demonstrated that hypoxia – when the brain is deprived of oxygen – caused the same selective degeneration of neurons that characteristically die in dementia.”
Professor Coulson said the next step would be to determine what levels of hypoxia result in brain degeneration in humans.


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