logo
Dementia: Sleep problems could 'double risk' of disease in later life

Dementia: Sleep problems could 'double risk' of disease in later life

Sky News5 days ago

Problems sleeping could double the risk of developing dementia later in life, according to new research.
Scientists have found that a diagnosis of a sleep disorder made people up to twice as likely to develop a neurodegenerative disease, such as dementia, in the following 15 years.
The study, carried out by Cardiff University's UK Dementia Research Institute and the NIH Intramural Centre for Alzheimer's and Related Dementia (CARD) in the US, is one of the largest to date.
Researchers investigated whether disrupted sleep is an early sign of neurodegeneration or makes someone more likely to develop dementia later.
They used data from over one million electronic health records to map out the relationship between the different neurodegenerative diseases and sleep disorders.
The risk of dementia was further increased for people recorded as experiencing multiple sleep disorders.
The findings also revealed that sleep disorders increased the risk of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, irrespective of genetic risk.
Sleep disorders and genetics are likely to be influencing the risk of diagnosis independently of each other, according to the study.
Dr Emily Simmonds works as a bioinformatician at the UK Dementia Research Institute.
She said scientists "wanted to understand the complicated relationship between sleep and dementia".
"People living with dementia often experience sleep problems, but there is not yet enough evidence to say for sure whether poor sleep increases risk of dementia," she said.
Dr Simmonds said the team "set out to see if we could figure out what order these things are happening".
"By using biobank data, we had timestamped records of when people had sleep disorders, and exactly when they were subsequently diagnosed with a neurodegenerative disease - rather than relying on self-reporting," she added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Braves hire ex-skipper Fredi Gonzalez to fix 3B coaching woes
Braves hire ex-skipper Fredi Gonzalez to fix 3B coaching woes

Reuters

time29 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Braves hire ex-skipper Fredi Gonzalez to fix 3B coaching woes

June 3 - The Atlanta Braves brought back former manager Fredi Gonzalez back to coach third base on Tuesday after a series of base-running blunders. He replaces Matt Tuiasosopo, who accepted a new position as a minor league infield coordinator. The Braves have seen four runners thrown out at home plate this season, including a crucial ninth-inning play in a 2-1 loss to the San Diego Padres on May 23 and an easy cut-down of Alex Verdugo by Boston Red Sox outfielder Jarren Duran in a 7-6 loss on May 17. It's a role reversal as Gonzalez, 61, joins manager Brian Snitker's coaching staff. Snitker was the third-base coach for the first two years of Gonzalez's stint as Atlanta's skipper from 2011-16. The Braves had a .512 winning percentage under Gonzalez and made the playoffs in 2012 and 2013. But after a 67-95 record in 2015 and a rough start to 2016, Snitker replaced Gonzalez in May of that year. General manager Alex Anthopoulos said the team didn't seriously consider making the change at third base until Sunday, and that Gonzalez's availability was key to the decision. "If he hadn't been available, I can't tell you we would have made this move, because it wasn't just make it to make it," Anthopoulos said, per The Athletic. "It had to be the right person and someone that could hit the ground running that we knew would be successful at it. And Fredi's proven that at the big-league level for years." Gonzalez also managed the Miami Marlins from 2007-10, winning The Sporting News Manager of the Year award in 2008, and returned to the Marlins to coach third base from 2017-19. Most recently, he spent five seasons coaching with the Baltimore Orioles before being let go at the end of the 2024 campaign. --Field Level Media

Bra-free Dakota Johnson jokes about almost spilling out of her low-cut blazer on late show
Bra-free Dakota Johnson jokes about almost spilling out of her low-cut blazer on late show

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bra-free Dakota Johnson jokes about almost spilling out of her low-cut blazer on late show

Dakota Johnson flaunted her cleavage while braless in a plunging black blazer and skirt set while appearing on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. The actress, 35, wowed in the striking look that that had a neckline that dipped low beneath her chest. As soon as Dakota sat down for the interview, she made a joke about her racy look. 'This is the wrong outfit,' she told Jimmy as soon as the interview started. Jimmy, who makes sure to not look at her chest, tells her: 'No, no, I think it's perfect,' adding: 'You look great.' Dakota thanked him and Jimmy said: 'Just don't...' 'My eyes are up here,' Dakota said. 'Just don't move,' Jimmy said, before bursting into laughter. 'I don't know where to... I can't even look there,' Jimmy says as he looks up at the ceiling and keeps his eyes there. 'I don't know what to do. I'm confused,' Jimmy says. Changing the subject, Jimmy tells her: 'I'm so happy you're back and it's always great to see you. Do you remember the last time I saw you?' Dakota smiles at him and says nothing. He continues: 'It was in this building' and she answers 'for the SNL 50?' 'Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary and I saw you in the hallway and we talked,' Jimmy explained. 'That's true,' Dakota added. 'Did you have? Wasn't that night crazy?' Jimmy asks, to which she agrees and says 'It was really crazy,' while adjusting her neckline. 'Didn't you think it was crazy? I feel like everyone thought it was so crazy,' she added. 'Everyone was in the best mood and walking around and like nothing really - everything... nothing really surprised me because it was like De Niro's over here, and... I mean did you see anyone that you freaked out on?' he asked. 'Well I was watching from under the bleachers where Lorne watches. I didn't go sit in the audience, which I thought was really special,' she said. 'Wow look at you,' he said. 'Cause me and Lorne, you know,' crossing her fingers. 'Was Lorne there?' he asked. 'He was like going back and forth. When he knew he was going to be on camera he'd be in the audience,' she said. Dakota asked him at one point, 'Tell me if there's a problem,' as she pointed to her chest area. He took a peek and told her: 'Right now there's not a problem. There's almost a problem but not quite - it's just like a...' his voice trailed off. 'Keep my posture real good,' she said. 'It's just everything is going according to plan,' he said, as she asked the audience: 'Does anyone have a blanket I could wear? Just kidding.'

MI5 lied 'deliberately and repeatedly' in neo-Nazi spy case, BBC tells High Court
MI5 lied 'deliberately and repeatedly' in neo-Nazi spy case, BBC tells High Court

BBC News

time30 minutes ago

  • BBC News

MI5 lied 'deliberately and repeatedly' in neo-Nazi spy case, BBC tells High Court

MI5 lied "deliberately and repeatedly" as it tried to defend its handling of a neo-Nazi agent who abused women, the BBC has told a panel of High Court corporation argued the threshold for contempt of court proceedings against MI5 and three individual officers had been James Eadie KC, acting for MI5, issued an "unreserved apology" on behalf of the Security Service but said the "errors that had been made had not been deliberate".The three judges - England and Wales' most senior judge, Lady Chief Justice Baroness Sue Carr, President of the King's Bench Division Dame Victoria Sharp and Mr Justice Chamberlain - reserved judgement on the case until a later date. The case, which began in 2022 with an attempt to block the BBC from publishing a story about the neo-Nazi agent, has become a major test of how the courts view MI5 and the credibility of its gave evidence to three courts, saying that it had never breached its core secrecy policy of neither confirming nor denying (NCND) that a man known only as X was a state in February, the BBC was able to prove with notes and recordings of phone calls with MI5 that this was MI5 officer had confirmed the agent's status as he tried to persuade me to drop an investigation into X, a violent neo-Nazi misogynist who used his Security Service role to coerce and terrify his former girlfriend, known publicly as "Beth".At Tuesday's hearing MI5 acknowledged that the NCND policy could no longer be maintained in this policy has meant significant amounts of evidence has been confined to closed hearings which neither the BBC nor Beth - who has brought a separate case complaining about MI5 - are permitted to Kilroy KC, representing Beth, said her client agreed with the BBC that the threshold for contempt of court proceedings had been met. There had been "copious levels of dishonesty" which had not been acknowledged in MI5's investigations into how it came to give false BBC's barrister, Jude Bunting KC, submitted to the court that it should consider contempt of court proceedings against MI5 itself, and three individual Security Service officers - including one who confirmed X's status as an agent on the phone to me and a senior officer known as Witness A who gave the false evidence to accounts of how it came to give false evidence "lack candour" and there is a "real concern" that the court has not been given a full explanation of what went wrong, Mr Bunting said an external review by the government's former chief lawyer Sir Jonathan Jones KC did not speak to two crucial James Eadie KC, representing the Attorney General for the Security Service, offered an "unreserved apology on behalf of MI5"."Everyone from the director general downwards acknowledges the seriousness caused," he said. MI5 director general Sir Ken McCallum immediately informed Home Secretary Yvette Cooper as soon as the matter was drawn to his attention, Sir James has been "a full and comprehensive investigation" which came to the conclusion that "the errors that had been made had not been deliberate" and that "there had been no misleading or lying", MI5's barrister said that contempt of court proceedings "would not be appropriate".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store