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婴幼儿睡眠与觉醒的视觉评分

The visual scoring of sleep and arousal in infants and children.

作者信息

Grigg-Damberger Madeleine, Gozal David, Marcus Carole L, Quan Stuart F, Rosen Carol L, Chervin Ronald D, Wise Merill, Picchietti Daniel L, Sheldon Stephan H, Iber Conrad

机构信息

Department of Neurology, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001, USA.

出版信息

J Clin Sleep Med. 2007 Mar 15;3(2):201-40.

Abstract

Age is probably the single most crucial factor determining how humans sleep. Age and level of vigilance significantly influence the electroencephalogram (EEG) and the polysomnogram (PSG). The Pediatric Task Force provide an evidence-based review of the age-related development of the polysomnographic features of sleep in neonates, infants, and children, assessing the reliability and validity of these features, and assessing alternative methods of measurement. We used this annotated supporting text to develop rules for scoring sleep and arousals in infants and children. A pediatric EEG or PSG can only be determined to be normal by assessing whether the EEG patterns are appropriate for maturational age. Sleep in infants at term can be scored as NREM and REM sleep because all the polysomnographic and EEG features of REM sleep are present and quiet sleep, if not NREM sleep, is at least "not REM sleep." The dominant posterior rhythm (DPR) of relaxed wakefulness increases in frequency with age: (1) 3.5-4.5 Hz in 75% of normal infants by 3-4 months post-term; (2) 5-6 Hz in most infants 5-6 months post-term; 3) 6 Hz in 70% of normal children by 2 months of age; and 3) 8 Hz (range 7.5-9.5 Hz) in 82% of normal children age 3 years, 9 Hz in 65% of 9-year-olds, and 10 Hz in 65% of 15-year-old controls. Sleep spindles in children occur independently at two different frequencies and two different scalp locations: 11.0-12.75 Hz over the frontal and 13.0-14.75 Hz over the centroparietal electrodes; these findings are most prominent in children younger than 13 years. Centroparietal spikes are often maximal over the vertex (Cz), less often maximal over the left central (C3) or right central (C4) EEG derivation. About 50% of sleep spindles within a particular infant's PSG are asynchronous before 6 months of age, 30% at 1 year. Based on this, we recommend that: (1) sleep spindles be scored as a polysomnographic signature of NREM stage 2 sleep (N2) at whatever age they are first seen in a PSG, typically present by 2 to 3 months post-term; (2) identify and score sleep spindles from the frontal and centroparietal EEG derivations, especially in infants and children younger than 13 years. NREM sleep in an infant or child can be scored if the dominant posterior rhythm occupies <50% of a 30-second epoch, and one or more of the following EEG patterns appear: (1) a diffuse lower voltage mixed frequency activity; (2) hypnagogic hypersynchrony; (3) rhythmic anterior theta of drowsiness; (4) diffuse high voltage occipital delta slowing; (5) runs or bursts of diffuse, frontal, frontocentral, or occipital maximal rhythmic 3-5 Hz slowing; (6) vertex sharp waves; and/or (7) post-arousal hypersynchrony. K complexes first appear 5 months post-term and are usually present by 6 months post-term, whereas clearly recognizable vertex sharp waves are most often seen 16 months post-term. Vertex sharp waves are best seen over the central (Cz, C3, C4) and K complexes over the frontal (Fz, F3, F4) electrodes. Slow wave activity (SWA) of slow wave sleep (SWS) is first seen as early as 2 to 3 months post-term and is usually present 4 to 4.5 months post-term. SWA of SWS in an infant or child often has a peak-to-peak amplitude of 100 to 400 microV. Based on consensus voting we recommended scoring N1, N2, and N3 corresponding to NREM 1, 2, and SWS whenever it was recognizable in an infant's PSG, usually by 4 to 4.5 months post-term (as early as 2-3 months post-term). Epochs of NREM sleep which contain no sleep spindles, K complexes, or SWA would be scored as N1; those which contain either K complexes or sleep spindles and <20% SWS as N2, and those in which >20% of the 30-second epoch contain 0.5 to 2 Hz >75 microV (usually 100-400 microV) activity as N3. The DPR should be scored in the EEG channel that is best observed, (typically occipital), but DPR reactive to eye opening can be seen in central electrodes. Because sleep spindles occur independently over the frontal and central regions in children, they should be scored whether they occur in the frontal or central regions. Because sleep spindles are asynchronous before age 2 years, simultaneous recording of left and right frontal and central activity may be warranted in children 1-2 years of age. Simultaneous recording of left, right, and midline central electrodes may be appropriate because of the asynchronous nature of sleep spindles before age 2 years, but reliability testing is needed. Evidence has shown that the PSG cannot reliably be used to identify neurological deficits or to predict behavior or outcome in infants because of significant diversity of results, even in normal infants. Normal sleep EEG patterns and architecture are present in the first year of life, even in infants with severe neurological compromise. Increasing evidence suggests that sleep and its disorders play critical roles in the development of healthy children and healthy adults thereafter. Reliability studies comparing head-to-head different scoring criteria, recording techniques, and derivations are needed so that future scoring recommendations can be based on evidence rather than consensus opinion. We need research comparing clinical outcomes with PSG measures to better inform clinicians and families exactly what meaning a PSG has in evaluating a child's suspected sleep disorder.

摘要

年龄可能是决定人类睡眠方式的唯一最重要因素。年龄和警觉水平会显著影响脑电图(EEG)和多导睡眠图(PSG)。儿科特别工作组对新生儿、婴儿和儿童睡眠多导睡眠图特征的年龄相关发育进行了循证综述,评估了这些特征的可靠性和有效性,并评估了替代测量方法。我们利用这段带注释的辅助文本制定了婴儿和儿童睡眠及觉醒评分规则。儿科脑电图或多导睡眠图只有通过评估脑电图模式是否与成熟年龄相适应才能确定为正常。足月婴儿的睡眠可分为非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠和快速眼动(REM)睡眠,因为REM睡眠的所有多导睡眠图和脑电图特征都存在,而且安静睡眠(即使不是NREM睡眠)至少是“非REM睡眠”。放松觉醒时的优势后节律(DPR)频率随年龄增加:(1)足月后3 - 4个月时,75%的正常婴儿为3.5 - 4.5赫兹;(2)足月后5 - 6个月时,大多数婴儿为5 - 6赫兹;(3)2个月大时,70%的正常儿童为6赫兹;(4)3岁正常儿童中82%为8赫兹(范围7.5 - 9.5赫兹),9岁儿童中65%为9赫兹,15岁对照儿童中65%为10赫兹。儿童的睡眠纺锤波在两个不同频率和两个不同头皮位置独立出现:额部为11.0 - 12.75赫兹,中央顶叶电极处为13.0 - 14.75赫兹;这些发现在13岁以下儿童中最为明显。中央顶叶棘波通常在头顶(Cz)处最大,在左侧中央(C3)或右侧中央(C4)脑电图导联处最大的情况较少。特定婴儿多导睡眠图中约50%的睡眠纺锤波在6个月前是不同步的,1岁时为30%。基于此,我们建议:(1)无论在多导睡眠图中首次出现于何年龄(通常在足月后2至3个月出现),睡眠纺锤波都应被记为NREM 2期睡眠(N2)的多导睡眠图特征;(2)从额部和中央顶叶脑电图导联识别并记录睡眠纺锤波,尤其是在13岁以下的婴儿和儿童中。如果优势后节律在3秒时段内占比<50%,且出现以下一种或多种脑电图模式,则婴儿或儿童的NREM睡眠可被评分:(1)弥漫性低电压混合频率活动;(2)催眠性超同步;(3)困倦时的节律性前部θ波;(4)弥漫性高电压枕部δ波减慢;(5)弥漫性、额部、额中央或枕部最大节律性3 - 5赫兹减慢的连续或阵发;(6)头顶尖波;和/或(7)觉醒后超同步。K复合波最早在足月后5个月出现,通常在足月后6个月出现,而清晰可辨的头顶尖波最常在足月后16个月出现。头顶尖波在中央(Cz、C3、C4)处最易观察到,K复合波在额部(Fz、F3、F4)电极处最易观察到。慢波睡眠(SWS)的慢波活动(SWA)最早在足月后2至3个月出现,通常在足月后4至4.5个月出现。婴儿或儿童SWS的SWA峰峰值幅度通常为100至400微伏。基于共识投票,我们建议只要在婴儿多导睡眠图中可识别(通常在足月后4至4.5个月,最早在2 - 3个月),就将N1、N2和N3分别对应于NREM 1、2和SWS进行评分。不包含睡眠纺锤波、K复合波或SWA的NREM睡眠时段应记为N1;包含K复合波或睡眠纺锤波且SWS<20%的记为N2,30秒时段中>20%包含0.5至2赫兹>75微伏(通常为100 - 400微伏)活动的记为N3。DPR应在观察最佳的脑电图通道(通常为枕部)进行评分,但对睁眼有反应的DPR可在中央电极处看到。由于儿童的睡眠纺锤波在额部和中央区域独立出现,无论出现在额部还是中央区域都应进行评分。由于2岁前睡眠纺锤波是不同步的,对于1 - 2岁的儿童,可能需要同时记录左右额部和中央活动。由于2岁前睡眠纺锤波的不同步性质,同时记录左右和中线中央电极可能是合适的,但需要进行可靠性测试。有证据表明,由于结果差异显著,即使在正常婴儿中,多导睡眠图也不能可靠地用于识别神经功能缺陷或预测婴儿的行为或预后。即使是患有严重神经功能损害的婴儿,在出生后的第一年也会出现正常的睡眠脑电图模式和结构。越来越多的证据表明,睡眠及其障碍在健康儿童以及此后健康成年人的发育中起着关键作用。需要进行可靠性研究,直接比较不同的评分标准、记录技术和导联,以便未来的评分建议能够基于证据而非共识意见。我们需要进行研究,将临床结果与多导睡眠图测量进行比较,以便更好地告知临床医生和家庭多导睡眠图在评估儿童疑似睡眠障碍时的确切意义。

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