Smoking, head injury and pesticides linked to rare sleep disorder
Contact
Smoking,
head injury, pesticide exposure and farming are risk factors for a rare
sleep disorder that causes people to act out their dreams occasionally causing bodily harm¯according
to new research. The disorder, known as Rapid Eye Movement Sleep
Behaviour (RBD) disorder, is often a precursor to neurodegenerative
diseases, such as Parkinson’s disease and dementia. The new study, led
by Dr. Ronald Postuma of the Research Institute of the McGill University
Health Centre (RI-MUHC), is published in the online issue of Neurology®.
RBD is characterized by the absence of muscle
paralysis normally present during sleep. Without the muscle paralysis, a
wide spectrum of behavioural release can occur during the REM (rapid
eye movement) stage of slumber when our most vivid dreaming occurs. This
can range from simple limb twitches to more complex movements, which
can even be violent in nature and in some cases result in injury to
either the person with RBD or their bed partner. RBD is estimated to
occur in only 0.5 per cent of adults, but studies have shown that more
than 50 per cent of people with the disorder develop a neurodegenerative
disease.
To overcome issues of limited sample size, Dr.
Postuma and his colleagues enlisted the support of the International REM
Sleep Behaviour Disorder Study Group (RBDSG), which enabled them to
access data from 13 institutions in 10 countries. Using a standardized
questionnaire that assessed potential environmental and lifestyle risk
factors, 347 people with REM sleep behavior disorder were compared to
347 people who did not have the disorder.
The study revealed that people with RBD were 59 per
cent more likely to have had a previous head injury with loss of
consciousness, 67 per cent more likely to have worked as farmers, and
more than twice as likely to have been exposed to pesticides through
work. Those with the disorder also had fewer years of education, with an
average of 11.1 years, compared to 12.7 years for those without the
disorder.
“Until now, we didn’t know much about the risk
factors for this disorder, except that it was more common in men and in
the elderly,” says Dr. Postuma, who is also a professor of medicine in
the department of neurology and neurosurgery at McGill University. “We
will now be able to look at ways to intervene with the neurodegenerative
process in patients with this disorder. They are the ideal candidates
for trial therapies because they are at the earliest stages of
neurological degeneration."
The study was supported by the FRSQ (Fonds de Recherche du Québec).
About the McGill University Health Centre (MUHC) and The Best Care for Life Campaign
One of the world’s foremost academic health centres, the MUHC offers exceptional and integrated patient-centric care, research, teaching and technology assessment. Affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine of McGill University, it is highly committed to the continuum of care in its community. The partner hospitals of the MUHC—the Lachine Hospital, the Montreal Chest Institute, the Montreal General Hospital, the Montreal Neurological Hospital, the Royal Victoria Hospital and the Montreal Children's Hospital— value multidisciplinary service throughout the lifespan, innovative technologies and practices, strategic partnerships and leadership in knowledge transfer. The MUHC is currently carrying out a $2.35-billion Redevelopment Project on three sites—the Glen, and the Montreal General and Lachine hospitals—designed to provide healthcare professionals with an effective environment in which to ensure patients and their families benefit from The Best Care for Life. The sites are also anchored in best sustainable-development practices, including LEED® and BOMA BESt guidelines www.muhc.ca muhc.ca/construction
The Best Care for Life Campaign is an unprecedented philanthropic effort aimed at raising the funds needed to complete the McGill University Health Centre’s Redevelopment Project as well as the Capital Development Plan. muhc.ca/cause
-30-
Media contact:
Marc-Antoine Pouliot
Communications Coordinator
Public Affairs & Strategic Planning
McGill University Health Centre
514 934-1934 ext. 71443
514-843-1560
marc-antoine [dot] pouliot [at] muhc [dot] mcgill [dot] ca (marc-antoine [dot] pouliot [at] muhc [dot] mcgill [dot] ca)



