Abstract

Abstract Introduction Most older adults with isolated REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) are men, yet in younger adults there is greater parity between the sexes. Whether the clinical characteristics between women and men with iRBD may differ remains unclear. We aimed to analyze presenting clinical and demographic characteristics of iRBD in men and women. Methods We identified 130 women and 130 men with PSG confirmed iRBD who were matched for time of polysomnographic diagnosis, abstracted their clinical histories, and comparatively analyzed clinical characteristics between the sexes. Results RBD symptom onset average age (50.4 ± 20.0 vs. 55.4 ±16.9 years, p=0.03) and age at diagnosis (56.4 ±16.7 vs. 62.5 ± 13.3 years, p< 0.01) were younger in women than in men. Injury frequency was similar between groups. Antidepressant use prior to diagnosis (80.8% vs 53.0%, p< 0.01), psychiatric comorbidity (79.8% vs. 50.8%, p< 0.01) and chronic pain syndrome (39.2% vs. 17.4%, p< 0.01) diagnoses were more frequent in women than men. Insomnia (31.5% vs. 18.2%, p= 0.01), hypersomnoence (50.8% vs 37.9%, p=0.04) and overlap parasomnia disorder (13.8% vs 9.8%, p=0.06) were more frequent in women than men, while sleep apnea (43.1% vs. 70.5%, p < 0.01.) and vascular co-morbidity (62.3% vs 83.3%, p< 0.01) occurred more frequently in men than women. Autoimmunity was similar between sexes. Conclusion Women were younger when diagnosed, and had more frequent psychiatric diagnoses and antidepressant use, with different comorbid sleep disturbances and comorbidities than men with iRBD. Key sex differences in iRBD could imply different etiologies and aid accurate and timely diagnosis. Support (if any)

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