The Borneo Post

Shining a light on ‘sundowning’

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GROWING up, Emily German looked up to her mother as a fierce role model who effortless­ly juggled family, friends and a successful career.

In the 1980s and ‘ 90s, Linda Larsen German had worked her way up the corporate ladder in Manhattan, helping to grow the Liz Claiborne business into a Fortune 500 company before leaving to start her own ventures. She was a natural-born leader with a quick mind.

“She was such a tough, powerful, strong woman. That is 100 per cent how I viewed her my entire life,” said Emily, 24, a software sales representa­tive who lives in New Orleans. “It was really because of my mom’s bright personalit­y that we caught on to her disease so quickly.”

In 2012, Emily and other family members noticed a shift in Linda’s behaviour. At age 61, she began to show uncharacte­ristic signs of confusion, agitation and restlessne­ss. Once Emily flew home to New York for a college winter break. She says she remembers her mother spending an hour searching for her parked car at the airport. They laughed it off at the time, but these “funny” instances became more frequent.

A year or so later, she witnessed her mother get frustrated and confused at the grocery store, snapping rudely at the cashier - something she wouldn’t ordinarily do. The shock of seeing her erratic behaviour was enough to lead Emily and her father to make a doctor’s appointmen­t for Linda.

In early 2014, at age 62, Linda was diagnosed with early- onset Alzheimer’s disease.

Soon after, Emily began to notice an odd cyclical pattern to her mother’s behaviour. As day turns to night, Linda becomes more disoriente­d, irritable and upset. “She’s more likely to repeat herself, have mood swings and get frustrated,” Emily said. “If she’s in a new place during the late afternoon, she’ll get really confused and want to go home.”

Linda is one of millions worldwide who experience a clinical phenomenon called sundowning, typically seen in people suffering from dementia or cognitive impairment. Also known as sundown syndrome, sundowning refers to the emergence or worsening of neuropsych­iatric symptoms such as agitation, aggression and disorienta­tion in the late afternoon or early evening. Like some sort of spell has been cast, their behaviour can switch from normal to highly erratic come nightfall.

“It can be a pretty stark contrast from day to night. We have to deal with this a lot in nursing homes, and it’s not uncommon for patients who have been having a good day to suddenly believe it’s time to go home,” said David Trinkle, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at Virginia Tech, who has treated Alzheimer’s patients for almost 30 years. “That’s when you’ll see patients try to leave the facility, and they will get extremely aggressive with screaming behaviour. I’ve had patients frequently call 911.”

Studies on prevalence rates show large variabilit­y depending on the setting and population, but sundowning has been observed in 10 to 25 per cent of those with moderate to severe dementia in nursing homes and up to 66 per cent of people with Alzheimer’s living at home. It also reportedly occurs in some cognitivel­y intact elderly individual­s and could be considered a sign of forthcomin­g dementia.

The cause of sundowning remains a mystery. Some physicians believe it has to do with lowered visibility that comes with darkness and shadows, or in some cases the shift change of hospital staff that happens around late afternoon. More recent research suggests it could be related to a disruption of the brain’s internal master clock, which prompts the emergence of behaviour disturbanc­es at sunset.

“There’s not a whole lot known about what mechanisms might be involved in sundowning, and it’s very poorly understood,” said William “Trey” Todd, a research fellow in neurology at Harvard Medical School. “But the fact that the symptoms seem to follow a pattern, with worsening in the late afternoon or early evening, suggests that something is going on with the circadian system.”

Indeed, one of the earliest symptoms seen in Alzheimer’s and other neurodegen­erative diseases is a disruption in the normal circadian rhythms of the body. These biological changes follow a near 24-hour cycle, influencin­g key bodily functions such as the sleep-wake cycle, hormone release, digestion

There’s not a whole lot known about what mechanisms might be involved in sundowning, and it’s very poorly understood. But the fact that the symptoms seem to follow a pattern, with worsening in the late afternoon or early evening, suggests that something is going on with the circadian system. William ‘Trey’ Todd, research fellow in neurology

and body temperatur­e. Keeping all these functions in sync is a master clock known as the suprachias­matic nucleus (SCN), a collection of 20,000 nerve cells in the brain. This tiny, wingshaped structure has the great responsibi­lity of coordinati­ng all the biological clocks in the body.

So how does the SCN manage to find the right time? The SCN takes in informatio­n about environmen­tal light levels from the eye so it can synchronis­e itself - and the rest of the body - with the natural light/dark cycle. For instance, in response to darkness, the SCN tells the brain to release more melatonin, a hormone that prepares the body for sleep and aids drowsiness.

Recent studies have found that disturbanc­es in the circadian system can occur years before the emergence of more classical symptoms such as memory loss and may even lead to the onset of disease. Individual­s with Alzheimer’s tend to have increasing­ly fragmented sleep. Melatonin release fails to happen at night as it should, and the natural rhythm of core body temperatur­e is disturbed. Other studies have identified excessive daytime sleepiness and sleep behaviour disorders as independen­t predictors of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and cognitive impairment­s associated with dementia.

In a study published this year, Todd and his colleagues discovered that the circadian clock also regulates an emotion seen frequently in sundowning: aggression. In male mice, aggression followed a daily cycle driven by the SCN, as measured by how often they attacked intruder mice. After disrupting the neural pathway from the SCN to the part of the brain associated with aggression, the mice lost this natural rhythm. Instead, they would attack more frequently during times that control mice would start their resting phase. “This may mean that the body’s internal clock regulates emotional patterns, and if you disrupt the circadian pathway that would keep that within the right timing, you can have really profound changes in behaviour at certain times of the day,” Todd said. “We thought then that there might be some implicatio­ns of our results for sundowning.”

Some previous studies on humans do suggest that damage to the circadian system can influence the severity of sundown syndrome. For instance, a 2001 study on 25 inpatients with Alzheimer’s disease found that patients who exhibited sundowning on a regular basis had profoundly disturbed circadian rhythms of activity and temperatur­e - much more so than those who did not sundown. But whether individual­s with dementia have damage to the SCN or its pathways that cause sundowning isn’t yet known.

 ?? — Photo courtesy of Emily German ?? Emily German and her mother, Linda Larsen German.
— Photo courtesy of Emily German Emily German and her mother, Linda Larsen German.

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