“we also demonstrated for the first time that osa can cause significant deficits in social cognition.”
to arrive at their results, the group recruited a relatively rare group of 27 men, aged 35 to 70, who were recently diagnosed with mild to severe osa and had no comorbidities. these patients can be hard to find because most people with osa also suffer from cardiovascular or metabolic disease, diabetes, stroke, chronic inflammation or depression. the group did not smoke or abuse alcohol and were not considered to be obese by their body mass index.
researchers also assembled a control group that consisted of seven men without osa, matched to the other group by age, bmi and education. they used a number of measures, including the watchpat test, to confirm the presence or absence of osa before assessing the cognitive function of the two groups.
obstructive sleep apnea was found to affect short-term memory
they found that subjects with severe osa exhibited poorer vigilance, executive functioning, short-term visual recognition memory and social and emotion recognition than the control group. patients with mild cases of the disorder fared better on these measures but still worse than those without osa.