The glymphatic system, which is primarily active during sleep, is a network of astroglial perivascular channels within the brain that allow for Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) influx and exchange. Glymphatics play a crucial role in the waste clearance of amyloid beta, a hallmark in the development of Alzheimer’s Disease and neurodegeneration. Recently, a bidirectional relationship between Alzheimer's Disease and sleep has also been suggested with the aggregation of amyloid beta associated with mid-life sleep disruption. However, the mechanistic link between sleep disruption, particularly over chronic time scales, and the development of Alzheimer’s pathology remains unclear. This study investigates whether chronic sleep disruption, similar to that experienced in humans, will impact downstream neuropathology. We hypothesize chronic sleep disruption will result in decreased glymphatic function and subsequently increased amyloid plaque burden. This experiment utilizes a chronic sleep fragmentation model in 120 5xFAD mice from 8 weeks to 16 weeks of age. In the Lafayette Sleep Fragmentation chambers, 60 animals are disturbed every two minutes during normal sleeping periods (daylight hours). 60 mice were placed in normal sleeping conditions. After eight weeks of sleep fragmentation or sham exposure, glymphatic function is assessed by in vivo near infrared imaging following stereotactic CSF tracer injection. Animals are perfusion fixed, cryosectioned, and glymphatic function is assessed by measurement of fluorescent cerebrospinal fluid tracers in brain tissue. Aquaporin-4 localization, amyloid plaque deposition, and markers of astroglial and microglial activation are assessed by immunofluorescence. In this project, I specifically work on cryosectioning the tissue, and understanding glymphatic function through the processes of immunofluorescence imaging and analysis. The collected data demonstrated that sleep disruption did increase neuropathological outcomes.The measured impact of glymphatic function was also correlated with these downstream pathological effects. These findings could be an indicator of interactions between neurological disease progression and an inflammatory expression after sleep disruption. They can also shed more light on the complex relationship between Alzheimer’s disease progression, the glymphatic system, and chronic sleep disruption.