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In her most famous scene, Shakespeare's Lady Macbeth (pictured here at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival) is fast asleep yet attempts to wash blood from her hands (photo by Hamish Irvine via Flickr)

Acting out dreams while asleep could be warning sign of brain disorder

Research that casts a whole new light on Lady Macbeth's hand washing

Researchers at the University of Toronto say a sleep disorder that causes people to act out their dreams is the best current predictor of brain diseases like Parkinson’s and some other forms of dementia.

“Rapid-eye-movement sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) is not just a precursor but also a critical warning sign of neurodegeneration that can lead to brain disease," says associate professor and lead author John Peever.

“In fact, as many as 80 to 90 per cent of people with RBD will develop a brain disease.”

As the name suggests, the disturbance occurs during the rapid-eye-movement (REM) stage of sleep and causes people to act out their dreams, often resulting in injury to themselves and/or bed partner. In healthy brains, muscles are temporarily paralyzed during sleep to prevent this from happening.

“It’s important for clinicians to recognize RBD as a potential indication of brain disease in order to diagnose patients at an earlier stage,” says Peever. “This is important because drugs that reduce neurodegeneration could be used in RBD patients to prevent (or protect) them from developing more severe degenerative disorders.”

His research examines the idea that neurodegeneration might first affect areas of the brain that control sleep before attacking brain areas that cause more common brain diseases like Alzheimer’s.

Peever says he hopes the results of his study lead to earlier and more effective treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.

His research is available in print and online in the latest issue of Trends in Neuroscience.

Michael Kennedy is a writer with University Relations at the University of Toronto.

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