Matthew Walker on health: what the evidence says · JRE #1109
“One of those toxic sticky proteins that builds the bus were awake is cooled PC Emma Lloyd be to employ just one of the leading causes of underline the mechanism of Alzheimer's disease.”
What the evidence says
Walker claims that beta-amyloid, a protein implicated in Alzheimer's disease, accumulates in the brain during wakefulness and is cleared during deep sleep, and that insufficient sleep is one of the leading causes of the disease. The clearance mechanism is grounded in real research: a 2013 study in Science (Xie et al.) showed the brain's glymphatic system clears metabolic waste, including amyloid-beta, more effectively during sleep in mice, and subsequent human and animal studies have found associations between poor sleep, disrupted slow-wave sleep, and higher amyloid burden. However, the U.S. National Institute on Aging lists "not getting enough sleep or not sleeping well" alongside factors like physical inactivity, diet, and social isolation as a modifiable risk factor for Alzheimer's, explicitly noting that researchers "cannot yet say for certain" whether addressing these factors prevents dementia. Established causal drivers recognized by NIA are rare genetic mutations (APP, PSEN1, PSEN2) and the APOE e4 allele, which increases risk but does not guarantee disease. Current evidence supports sleep loss as an associated risk factor and an active area of mechanistic research, not as a confirmed leading cause of Alzheimer's; Walker's framing overstates the certainty of that causal role.