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Centella asiatica improves sleep quality and quantity in aged mice.

Laura Dovek, Carolyn E Tinsley, Katelyn Gutowsky, Kayla McDaniel, Zoe Potter et al.
Other bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2025 1 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Controlled Clinical Trial
Población
18-month-old male and female C57BL6/J mice
Intervención
Centella asiatica improves sleep quality and quantity in aged mice. 1000 mg/kg/day
Comparador
Control chow
Resultado primario
Sleep quality and quantity (EEG/EMG)
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
Moderate

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Age-related sleep disruption is common in older adults. Not only does the total amount of time spent in sleep decline, but the number of arousals during sleep increases with age. As sleep is important for both memory consolidation and to prevent neurodegenerative pathology, this decline in sleep and/or sleep consolidation may underlie age-related cognitive decline and dementias. Furthermore, treatment of sleep disruption can improve quality of life. However, few interventions have successfully reversed age-related sleep decline. Extracts from the plant Centella asiatica have demonstrated neuroprotective effects in human, rodent, and fly models of aging and neurodegenerative diseases, and is a promising intervention for dementias, yet little is known about how these extracts affect sleep patterns. Here, we administered Centella asiatica water extract ( CAW) dosed or control chow to male and female C57BL6/J mice aged 18 months. Effects on sleep composition were determined using electrodes that recorded EEG and EMG signals. We found that CAW dosed chow (1000 mg/kg/day) increased REM sleep time in aged male mice and decreased the number of arousals during sleep observed in aged females, compared to age- and sex-matched controls. We conclude that CAW administered in food has a moderate, sex-dependent effect on sleep quantity and quality. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Sleep declines with age and may underline age-related cognitive changes. However, few interventions have successfully reversed age-related sleep and cognitive decline. This study found that botanical extract from the plant Centella asiatica increased total REM sleep time in aged male mice, and decreased sleep fragmentation in aged female mice, compared to age- and sex-matched controls. Whether these moderate, sex-dependent effect sizes on sleep in aged mice are impactful enough to affect cognition, quality of life, and/or neurodegenerative pathology could be explored in future studies.

TL;DR

It is found that botanical extract from the plant Centella asiatica increased total REM sleep time in aged male mice, and decreased sleep fragmentation in aged female mice, compared to age- and sex-matched controls.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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