Poor Sleep Tied to Alzheimer’s Risk in Older Women
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Poor Sleep Tied to Alzheimer’s Risk in Older Women
Improving sleep could become a target for future Alzheimer’s prevention strategies, particularly for women at elevated genetic risk. Photo Credit: iStock/Liudmila Chernetska
Story by:
Lizelda Lopez
llopez2@ucsd.edu
Published Date
May 18, 2026
Story by:
Lizelda Lopez
llopez2@ucsd.edu
Topics covered:
Alzheimer’s Disease
Sleep
Cognitive Decline
Risk Factor
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Article Content
Key Takeaways
Sleep complaints may represent both an early warning sign and a potential intervention target for Alzheimer’s disease in older women.<br>Poor sleep was linked to worse memory and greater tau buildup in brain regions affected early in Alzheimer’s disease, but only in women with elevated genetic risk.<br>Assessing self-reported sleep problems is not only inexpensive, but could potentially also be a target for Alzheimer’s disease prevention efforts.
Sleep complaints may be an important Alzheimer’s disease risk factor in older women with a higher genetic predisposition to the disease, according to a new study from researchers at the University of California San Diego. The findings suggest that women with a higher genetic risk for Alzheimer’s who reported poorer sleep also showed greater memory difficulties and more Alzheimer’s-related brain changes.
Researchers examined 69 women aged 65 years and older participating in the Women Inflammation Tau Study, an ongoing project focused on aging and Alzheimer’s disease risk. Participants completed questionnaires about their sleep quality, underwent memory testing and received brain scans that measured tau, a protein that accumulates abnormally in Alzheimer’s disease.
The study found that poorer self-reported sleep was associated with worse visual memory performance and greater tau accumulation in brain regions affected early in Alzheimer’s disease — but only among women with higher genetic risk. Women with lower genetic risk did not show the same relationship between sleep complaints, memory and tau buildup. The finding was specific to visual memory and was not observed for verbal memory.
Researchers say the results add to growing evidence that sleep disturbances and Alzheimer’s disease may reinforce one another over time. Previous studies have suggested that disrupted sleep can contribute to the buildup of abnormal tau proteins, while Alzheimer’s-related brain changes may also interfere with healthy sleep patterns. Because women account for nearly two-thirds of Alzheimer’s cases and frequently report poorer sleep quality than men, the researchers say sleep may represent an important and potentially modifiable risk factor in older women.
The authors note that self-reported sleep assessments are inexpensive and easy to administer, raising the possibility that sleep complaints could help identify people who may benefit from closer monitoring or early intervention. They also suggest that improving sleep could become a target for future Alzheimer’s prevention strategies, particularly for women at elevated genetic risk. Overall, it might be important to take sleep complaints seriously for older women as it may be relevant to their brain health.
The study (Sleep complaints and genetic risk of Alzheimer’s disease in older women: associations with memory and tau deposition), led by Kitty Lui, a UC San Diego/San Diego State University joint doctoral student in clinical psychology and Sarah Banks, PhD, professor of neuroscience and psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine, published on May 6, 2026 in the Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease.
Topics covered:
Alzheimer’s Disease
Sleep
Cognitive Decline
Risk Factor
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