Sleep apnea may affect brain health of men

A small, new study suggests apnea may prompt a decline in brain health among middle-aged men who have no other significant health issues. Image by Stefano Ferrario from Pixabay

Sleep apnea is a very disruptive breathing disorder that’s believed to rob millions of Americans of sound, restful sleep.

Now, a small, new study suggests the disorder may also prompt a decline in brain health among middle-aged men who have no other significant health issues.

That decline can manifest as significant memory loss, less impulse control, impaired spatial reasoning, and/or an inability to focus and think clearly.

“Sleep apnea is when your breathing stops and starts while you sleep, due to partial or full occlusion [blockage] of your upper airway,” explained study author Dr. Ivana Rosenzweig, head of the Sleep and Brain Plasticity Centre at King’s College London, in the United Kingdom.

Prior research has consistently chalked up any mental impairment observed among obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients “to diseases that frequently present jointly with OSA, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular and other metabolic diseases,” she said.

“Our study findings suggest that having obstructive sleep apnea may be sufficient for thinking capacity changes to occur as early as in middle age, even in otherwise healthy individuals,” Rosenzweig added.

The research team noted that between 15% and 30% of all men have sleep apnea. Meanwhile, 10% to 15% of women also struggle with the disorder, though Rosenzweig noted that it’s less common among premenopausal women relative to their male peers. That gender gap, however, evaporates after menopause.

For the study, the researchers decided to track the mental status of 27 male OSA patients who did not have any additional medical issues of note. No women were included in the analysis.

All were between the ages of 35 and 70. Sixteen patients were diagnosed with mild OSA and 11 had severe sleep apnea. None had a current smoking habit or drinking problem, and no one was obese.

The study authors conducted a battery of what they described as “very sensitive” thought-processing tests among the pool of OSA patients, as well as among a comparison group of seven men who did not have sleep apnea.

The result: patients with either mild or severe sleep apnea fared notably worse on the tests compared with the men who didn’t have OSA.

Specifically, OSA patients scored more poorly in terms of short-term visual memory skills, the ability to remain vigilant, the ability to plan and make decisions, and the ability to “read” emotions and social situations.

The more severe their sleep apnea, the worse the OSA patients performed, according to the report.

Rosenzweig emphasized that the investigation is a small “proof-of-concept” study, making it impossible to pin down cause and effect.

Still, the “study suggests that OSA itself is sufficient to kickstart thinking capacity change,” she added.

“This will of course need to be proven in much larger studies, which will follow patients for a longer period of time,” Rosenzweig said.

The findings were published Thursday in the journal Frontiers in Sleep.

Percy Griffin is director of scientific engagement with the Alzheimer’s Association. He said that it’s been “known for some time that sleep disturbances in general are associated with changes in cognition.”

And because sleep apnea is known to disrupt both oxygen flow and sleep quality, Griffin suggested it is “unsurprising” that the disorder might increase the risk for thinking declines.

Even so, he cautioned that the study “is too preliminary and small to inform generalizations” to draw definitive conclusions about what is going on and what might be the best way to minimize the risk of thinking problems.

Dr. Andrew Varga, a sleep medicine physician with the Mount Sinai Integrative Sleep Center in New York City, agreed.

He noted that his entire career has been spent examining a potential connection between sleep apnea and Alzheimer’s risk. So, for him, the notion that the two are linked “makes sense.”

That, Varga explained, is because all organs – including the brain – need oxygen to function, and one of the main characteristics of sleep apnea “is the intermittent hypoxia, meaning the repetitive dips of oxygen levels in your blood.”

Still, the latest study was “enormously simple,” he noted, and did not include a follow-up assessment.

“So, all you can really say from this is that sleep apnea appears to perhaps result in worse results on these sorts of tests,” said Varga. “I do believe that sleep apnea is a risk factor. But it’s a fairly big leap to draw that conclusion from this paper.”

More information

There’s more on the possible link between sleep apnea and brain health at the Cleveland Clinic.

Copyright © 2023 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Read More
Tyisha Menjivar

Latest

What Workplace Injuries Really Cost Your Business (It’s More Than You Think)

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Key Takeaways The highest costs of workplace injuries are often indirect — not medical bills or insurance claims, but lost productivity, higher premiums, hiring and training replacements and operational disruptions. Workplace injuries can damage company culture and reputation. Safety incidents can lower employee morale, increase turnover and

World Cup final is already the biggest ever prediction market as Kalshi bets top $1.27 billion—with Spain favored to beat Argentina

The World Cup is driving record-breaking activity on prediction markets, with popular platforms Kalshi and Polymarket reporting their highest trading volumes to date. Just days ahead of Sunday’s final, the Argentina–Spain contract has become the single largest market in the platforms’ history, while overall World Cup trading has outpaced other major sports-related contracts. According to

The AI Gold Rush Is Driving an Energy Crisis. Here’s What Every Business Needs to Know.

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Key Takeaways AI is consuming more power than most businesses realize. A standard enterprise server rack draws roughly 5-10 kilowatts. An AI-optimized rack running GPU clusters can pull 40-100 kilowatts or more. Energy costs flow downstream, and so do supply chain constraints. For any business that relies

Amazon just beat Starlink to a market Musk can’t crack

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

Newsletter

Don't miss

What Workplace Injuries Really Cost Your Business (It’s More Than You Think)

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Key Takeaways The highest costs of workplace injuries are often indirect — not medical bills or insurance claims, but lost productivity, higher premiums, hiring and training replacements and operational disruptions. Workplace injuries can damage company culture and reputation. Safety incidents can lower employee morale, increase turnover and

World Cup final is already the biggest ever prediction market as Kalshi bets top $1.27 billion—with Spain favored to beat Argentina

The World Cup is driving record-breaking activity on prediction markets, with popular platforms Kalshi and Polymarket reporting their highest trading volumes to date. Just days ahead of Sunday’s final, the Argentina–Spain contract has become the single largest market in the platforms’ history, while overall World Cup trading has outpaced other major sports-related contracts. According to

The AI Gold Rush Is Driving an Energy Crisis. Here’s What Every Business Needs to Know.

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Key Takeaways AI is consuming more power than most businesses realize. A standard enterprise server rack draws roughly 5-10 kilowatts. An AI-optimized rack running GPU clusters can pull 40-100 kilowatts or more. Energy costs flow downstream, and so do supply chain constraints. For any business that relies

Amazon just beat Starlink to a market Musk can’t crack

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

She Retired From Engineering at 58 and Turned Her Creative Hobby Into a Business. It’s Made Tens of Thousands of Dollars: ‘No Regrets.’

Key Takeaways Hudick began to explore her passion for design at a jewelry-making class in 2006. She honed her craft over the years, and friends suggested she start to sell her pieces. Now retired as an engineer, she’s focusing on the business and teaching workshops. In 2024, Anna Hudick, then 58 years old, retired from

Grey Business processes $61 million as stablecoins dominate payments

Grey Business enables startups and SMEs to open US Dollar (USD) corporate accounts, send and receive international payments, convert currencies, and transact using stablecoins such as USDC and USDT...

Utah Marketers to Host Free Business Networking Event in Layton on June 24

The custom web design company is hosting free monthly networking events for Northern Utah business leaders, with the next event scheduled for June 24 from 4 to 6 p.m. Utah Marketers is hosting a free local business networking event on June 24 from 4 to 6 p.m. at the company’s Layton office. The event is

WellnessVibe Announces Business DNA Workshop in Delhi and Mumbai, where Ancient Sound Wisdom Meets Modern Business Strategy

WellnessVibe has officially announced the launch of its transformative Business DNA Workshop on 7th June 2026 in Delhi and 20th June 2026 in Mumbai. (1888PressRelease) June 03, 2026 - Delhi/Mumbai, India - WellnessVibe has officially announced the launch of its transformative Business DNA Workshop on 7th June 2026 in Delhi and 20th June 2026 in