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Sleep and Circadian Disruption in Neurodegeneration

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mechanism2036 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Sleep and Circadian Disruption in Neurodegeneration

Introduction

Sleep and circadian rhythm disruption represent increasingly recognized modifiable risk factors and early biomarkers in neurodegenerative diseases. The relationship between sleep, circadian function, and neurodegeneration is bidirectional: while neurodegenerative pathology damages sleep-regulating neural circuits, impaired sleep and circadian function accelerate the accumulation of toxic proteins through failure of clearance mechanisms. This mechanistic convergence positions sleep-circadian dysfunction as both a therapeutic target and a potential disease-modifying intervention point for Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), and Huntington's disease (HD).

A landmark 2026 study in Nature Communications demonstrated that glymphatic clearance during normal sleep increased morning plasma levels of AD biomarkers (reflecting successful brain-to-blood clearance), while sleep deprivation blocked this clearance pathway—providing direct human evidence for the sleep-dependent waste clearance hypothesis[@nedergaard2026]. This finding joins a growing body of research establishing sleep-circadian disruption as a core mechanistic driver of neurodegeneration rather than merely a symptomatic manifestation.

Sleep Architecture Changes Across Neurodegenerative Diseases

Alzheimer's Disease

Sleep architecture abnormalities in AD are among the earliest detectable changes, often preceding clinical diagnosis by years:

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