Abstract

Patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and related dementias are commonly reported to exhibit aggressive behavior and other emotional behavioral disturbances, which create a tremendous caretaker burden. There has been an abundance of work highlighting the importance of circadian function on mood and emotional behavioral regulation, and recent evidence demonstrates that a specific hypothalamic pathway links the circadian system to neurons that modulate aggressive behavior, regulating the propensity for aggression across the day. Such shared circuitry may have important ramifications for clarifying the complex interactions underlying “sundowning syndrome,” a poorly understood (and even controversial) clinical phenomenon in AD and dementia patients that is characterized by agitation, aggression, and delirium during the late afternoon and early evening hours. The goal of this review is to highlight the potential output and input pathways of the circadian system that may underlie circadian dysfunction and behavioral aggression associated with sundowning syndrome, and to discuss possible ways these pathways might inform specific interventions for treatment. Moreover, the apparent bidirectional relationship between chronic disruptions of circadian and sleep-wake regulation and the pathology and symptoms of AD suggest that understanding the role of these circuits in such neurobehavioral pathologies could lead to better diagnostic or even preventive measures.

Highlights

  • Behavioral aggression and circadian dysfunction are both prevalent in several neural disorders (Todd and Machado, 2019), including Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and related dementias, and there has been an abundance of work over the last decade highlighting the general importance of circadian function on the regulation of mood and emotional behavior, including aggression (Bronsard and Bartolomei, 2013; Hood and Amir, 2018; Taylor and Hasler, 2018; Logan and McClung, 2019; Ketchesin et al, 2020)

  • Several characteristic non-cognitive symptoms of AD and related dementias involve behavioral and physiological processes known to be regulated by the hypothalamus (Ishii and Iadecola, 2015; Hiller and Ishii, 2018)

  • These include, among others, circadian and sleep-wake dysfunction, and emotional behavioral disruptions such as agitation and aggression. These particular non-cognitive symptoms are comorbid in the clinical phenomenon known as sundowning syndrome

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Summary

Introduction

Behavioral aggression and circadian dysfunction are both prevalent in several neural disorders (Todd and Machado, 2019), including Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and related dementias, and there has been an abundance of work over the last decade highlighting the general importance of circadian function on the regulation of mood and emotional behavior, including aggression (Bronsard and Bartolomei, 2013; Hood and Amir, 2018; Taylor and Hasler, 2018; Logan and McClung, 2019; Ketchesin et al, 2020). Todd et al (2018) showed that a functionally connected circuit from the SCN, through the nearby subparaventricular zone (SPZ), gates the activity of neurons within the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) that drive aggressive behavior (the SCN → SPZ → VMH pathway, see Figure 1). This pathway may be a substrate through which circadian dysfunction can lead to increased aggression, both acutely and chronically in disorders that are characterized by circadian disruption and high levels of aggression and agitation

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