Sleep Apnea’s Early Brain Signature: Altered Metabolism and Connectivity in Young Adults
A study using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET imaging has identified distinct brain glucose metabolism and connectivity changes in young, otherwise healthy adults with moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Compared to controls, patients showed fronto-parietal hypometabolism and cerebellar hypermetabolism, with the latter linked to impaired REM sleep. Seed-based connectivity analyses further revealed disruptions in attentional and limbic networks. The findings suggest that OSA itself may be a direct cause of early brain dysfunction, independent of other comorbidities.
Why it might matter to you:
This research demonstrates how a common, treatable condition can produce quantifiable, early brain changes detectable via neuroimaging. For professionals focused on neurodegenerative disease biomarkers, it underscores the importance of accounting for systemic factors like sleep disorders when interpreting metabolic and connectivity data. The study provides a model for linking a specific physiological insult to a multimodal biomarker profile, which is central to developing actionable diagnostic and monitoring frameworks.
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