People who take longer to get to the dreaming part of the sleep cycle are more likely to develop dementia, a new study suggests.

Taking longer to enter the dream phase — known as rapid eye movement or REM — can disrupt the ability to consolidate memories and interfere with emotion regulation, say scientists.

Recent studies have shown that both the quality and the amount of sleep we get may influence our risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.

Now, new research suggests that people who take “significantly longer” to start REM may be experiencing an early symptom of the disease.

Researchers explained that REM follows three phases of non-REM sleep, each deeper than the last.

The four phases take 90 minutes or more to complete, depending on age, and a person may cycle through them four or five times in a typical night. Older people take longer to reach REM.

During REM sleep the brain processes memories, especially those that are emotionally charged, and puts them into long-term storage.

“The delay in REM sleep disrupts the brain’s ability to consolidate memories by interfering with the process that contributes to learning and memory,” said study co-senior author Professor Yue Leng, of the University of California, San Francisco

“If it is insufficient or delayed, it may increase the stress hormone cortisol. This can impair the brain’s hippocampus, a critical structure for memory consolidation.”

Researchers followed 128 people with an average age of 70 from the neurology unit of the China-Japan Friendship Hospital in Beijing. Half had Alzheimer’s, and around a third had mild cognitive impairment, a frequent precursor to Alzheimer’s.

The participants in the study slept overnight in the clinic so researchers could measure their brainwave activity, eye movement, heart rate and breathing.

Fitness trackers can capture some of this information, but it is less precise.

The researchers divided the participants into early and delayed REM sleep.

On average, the early group reached REM less than 98 minutes after falling asleep, while the late group reached it more than 193 minutes after falling asleep.

Those with Alzheimer’s were more likely to have delayed REM sleep, according to the findings published in Alzheimer’s and Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

They also tended to have higher levels of the two toxic proteins, amyloid and tau, found in people with the condition.

Those with delayed REM sleep had 16% more amyloid and 29% more tau than those with early REM sleep. They also had 39% less of a healthy protein called brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), which drops in Alzheimer’s.

“Future research should study the effects of certain medications that influence sleep patterns, as these may modify disease progression,” Leng said.

She added that melatonin can boost REM sleep, and studies in mice have shown that it decreases tau and amyloid accumulation.

Other drugs that treat insomnia by blocking a chemical that suppresses REM sleep also have been shown to decrease tau and amyloid.

People who are concerned about their risk for Alzheimer’s should practice healthy sleep habits that facilitate the transition from light sleep to REM sleep, according to the research team.

“This includes treating conditions like sleep apnoea and avoiding heavy drinking, since both can interfere with a healthy sleep cycle,” added study co-senior author Dr Dantao Peng, of the Department of Neurology at the China-Japan Friendship Hospital in Beijing.

“Patients taking certain antidepressants and sedatives that reduce REM sleep should discuss their concerns with their doctor, if they are worried about Alzheimer’s.”

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