Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Good quality sleep and avoiding sleep apnoea can boost brain power: study

Monash University 3 mins read

Good quality sleep and the absence of sleep apnoea are associated with better cognitive function, a Monash-University-led international study has found.


Published in JAMA Network Open, the study investigated 5946 adults in the USA in five independent community-based cohorts involved in an overnight sleep study and neuropsychological assessments.

It found that better sleep quality and the absence of sleep apnoea in adults aged 58-89 who had not experienced stroke or dementia were associated with better cognition over five years of follow-up. 

Individual differences in the composition of sleep, such as the time spent in light sleep, deep sleep, and REM sleep, were not associated with cognition.

“These findings suggest that in adults without dementia, sleep consolidation and the absence of sleep apnoea may be particularly important for optimising cognition with ageing,” the researchers wrote.

First author and Monash University Associate Professor Matthew Pase, from the Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, who presented the findings at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference in the Netherlands, said the study  investigated which aspects of sleep patterns and respiratory-related sleep disturbances were associated with cognitive function in middle-aged to older adults.

Since participants in this community-based study did not present with any specific sleep complaints, the association between even mild obstructive sleep apnoea and poorer cognition is an important observation.

Associate Professor Pase said the findings suggested that the role of interventions to improve sleep for maintaining cognitive function required investigation. 

“At least half our sample had evidence of at least mild obstructive sleep apnoea,” he said.

“I think the most interesting finding is that participants that have mild to severe sleep apnoea had worse cognition, so they had worse thinking and memory performance, for example.  

“This is significant because there have been some studies that have shown relationships between obstructive sleep apnoea and poor cognition, but they’ve genuinely relied on people with a  diagnosis.

“The take home is that our findings suggest different elements of sleep are important for cognitive health, particularly the quality of someone’s overnight sleep and whether or not they have sleep apnoea.”

Associate Professor Pase said good sleep was essential for health, yet associations between sleep and dementia risk remained “incompletely understood”.

“Most research on sleep and cognition has used subjective reports of sleep or rest-activity patterns,” he said. 

“A major strength of the current study was the use of objective overnight sleep studies in such a large number of participants.” 

This study is the first to come from the Sleep and Dementia Consortium, which was established to study associations between risk of dementia and markers of accelerated brain ageing and injury measured with brain imaging and cognitive testing.

It is led by Associate Professor Pase and Associate Professor Jayandra Himali from the University of Texas in San Antonio.


The consortium curated gold standard data from five population-based cohorts across the USA with methodologically consistent, overnight, home-based sleep studies and neuropsychological assessments over five years of follow-up.

“This has allowed us to generate the best evidence yet as to which aspects of sleep are more important for cognitive health,” Associate Professor Pase said.

The cohorts included the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study, Cardiovascular Health Study, Framingham Heart Study (FHS), Osteoporotic Fractures in Men Study, and Study of Osteoporotic Fractures. 

Results were adjusted for demographic variables, the time between the sleep study and neuropsychological assessment (0-5 years), body mass index, antidepressant use, and sedative use. 

One of the next steps is for the researchers to explore the aspects of sleep health most strongly related to dementia risk.

Associate Professor Pase is available for interview by email after 4pm AEST: [email protected] 

For media enquiries please contact:


Monash University

Cheryl Critchley - Communications Manager (medical)
E: [email protected] 

T: +61 (0) 418 312 596

For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site  


For general media enquiries please contact:
Monash Media
E: [email protected]
T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840

 

More from this category

  • General News, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 14:07
Parliament of Australia

Public hearing concerning the National Redress Scheme

TheJoint Standing Committee on Implementation of the National Redress Schemewill hold a public hearing in Canberra on Friday, 13 March 2026, for itsinquiry into the continuing operation of the Scheme. Committee Chair, Ms Jodie Belyea MP, said the Committee is grateful for the contributions made in support of the inquiry to date. ‘The National Redress Scheme plays a central role in Australia’s response to institutional child sexual abuse. It is an important program for a significant number of people. The Committee has received a substantial number of submissions in support of our current inquiry, and public hearings over the coming…

  • Energy, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 12:11
Sweltering Cities

The cost of keeping cool is making Australians sick: New report reveals millions forced to ration cooling during record heat

12 March 2026 Sweltering Cities has today released the findings of its 2026 Summer Survey, exposing a national health crisis driven by the rising cost of keeping cool. With data from more than 2,600 respondents across 766 postcodes, the report proves that for many Australians the high cost of staying cool is having serious physical and mental health impacts. The 2025/26 summer saw 68% of all respondents report feeling unwell due to heat. However, the survey reveals that this burden is falling most heavily on those already struggling with the cost of living. For renters and people with disabilities, the…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 10:01
Monash University

Monash Researchers Awarded up to $22.4 Million AUD to Develop New Medicines for Restoring Lymphatic Pumping

Monash University is partnering with the University of Missouri and the University of Pennsylvania to develop first-in-class medicines designed to reverse poor lymphatic vessel contraction and transport function, backed by an up to $22.4 million AUD Award from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H). The researchers join ARPA-H’s GLIDE (Groundbreaking Lymphatic Interventions and Drug Exploration) program to transform how both primary lymphatic diseases and common chronic diseases are treated by developing innovative therapeutics that alleviate, repair or regenerate a dysfunctional lymphatic vascular system. Professor Arthur Christopoulos, Dean of the Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, said the work…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.