Sleep and cognition in South African patients with non-functioning pituitary adenomas

Strong lines of evidence in the neuroscience literature indicate that (a) healthy sleep facilitates cognitive processing, and (b) sleep disruption is associated with cognitive dysfunction. Despite the fact that patients with pituitary disease often display both disrupted sleep and cognitive dysfunct...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2024-01, Vol.19 (1), p.e0296387-e0296387
Hauptverfasser: de Villiers, Olivia, Elliot-Wilson, Claudia, Thomas, Kevin G F, Semple, Patrick L, Naiker, Thurandrie, Henry, Michelle, Ross, Ian L
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container_title PloS one
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creator de Villiers, Olivia
Elliot-Wilson, Claudia
Thomas, Kevin G F
Semple, Patrick L
Naiker, Thurandrie
Henry, Michelle
Ross, Ian L
description Strong lines of evidence in the neuroscience literature indicate that (a) healthy sleep facilitates cognitive processing, and (b) sleep disruption is associated with cognitive dysfunction. Despite the fact that patients with pituitary disease often display both disrupted sleep and cognitive dysfunction, few previous studies investigate whether these clinical characteristics in these patients might be related. Hence, we explored whether sleep disruption in patients with pituitary disease mediates their cognitive dysfunction. We recruited 18 patients with non-functioning pituitary adenomas (NFPA) and 19 sociodemographically matched healthy controls. They completed the Global Sleep Assessment Questionnaire (thus providing self-report data regarding sleep disruption) and were administered the Brief Test of Adult Cognition by Telephone, which assesses cognitive functioning in the domains of processing speed, working memory, episodic memory, inhibition, and reasoning. We found no significant differences in cognition between patients and controls. Furthermore, spectra of sleep disturbance did not differ significantly between patients and controls. Our data suggest that NFPA patients' cognition and sleep quality is relatively intact, and that sleep disruption does not mediate cognitive dysfunction. Larger studies should characterize sleep and cognition in patients with NFPA (and other pituitary diseases) to confirm whether disruption of the former mediates impairment in the latter.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0296387
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subjects Adenoma
Analysis
Biology and Life Sciences
Cardiovascular disease
Cognition
Cognition & reasoning
Cognition disorders
Cognitive ability
Complications and side effects
Diagnosis
Disruption
Electroencephalography
Executive function
Health aspects
Hormones
Information processing
Mediation
Medicine and Health Sciences
Memory
Neurosciences
Patients
Pituitary
Pituitary gland
Pituitary gland tumors
Radiation therapy
Sleep
Sleep disorders
Surgery
Tumors
title Sleep and cognition in South African patients with non-functioning pituitary adenomas
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