Ebarhim Amintehran, Babak Ghalehbaghi, Alimohammad Asghari, Shabnam Jalilolghadr, Alireza Ahmadvand, Forough Foroughi
Department Otolaryngology, Rasoul Akram Hospital, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Iran J Pediatr. 2013 Feb;23(1):45-52.
Sleep problems are experienced by 25-30 percent of children and adolescents, regardless of age. The purpose of this study was to investigate if there is any relationship between gender or school entrance and sleep complaints.
From June 2008 to May 2009 children aged 2 to 12 years were selected by clustered randomization of families. The Persian version of the BEARS questionnaire (Bedtime problems, Excessive sleepiness, Awakenings during the night, Regularity of sleep, Snoring) with five domains was filled out by general pediatricians. Prevalence of sleep complaints in each B-E-A-R-S category was calculated and compared for pre-school and school-age groups.
BEARS questionnaire was completed for a total of 746 children (2-12 years old); 325 in pre-school-age group (2-6 years old) (142 females [43.7%] and 183 males [56.3%]) and 421 in primary school-age group (7-12 years old) with the average age of 3.93 (±0.16) years and 9.63 (±0.16) years respectively. The most common screening problem in both groups was excessive daytime sleepiness (64.9% and 62.9% respectively). Bedtime problems and also regularity and duration of sleep were significantly more prevalent in pre-school-age group (P<0.0002; odds ratio [OR] =1.98; 95% confidence interval [95%CI]: 1.98-4.20; and OR=2.00; 95%CI: 1.41- 2.84 respectively). The difference between mean sleep duration between pre-school age and school-age groups was statistically significant (P<0.0001).
The current survey shows that different types of sleep problems are relatively high especially in the form of excessive daytime sleeping domain in preschool- and school-aged children. Bedtime problems and regularity problems were significantly more prevalent in pre-school-age group. School entrance seems to play a positive role for bedtime problems, and sleep-disordered breathing.
25%至30%的儿童和青少年都存在睡眠问题,与年龄无关。本研究的目的是调查性别或入学情况与睡眠问题之间是否存在任何关联。
从2008年6月至2009年5月,通过对家庭进行整群随机抽样,选取了2至12岁的儿童。由普通儿科医生填写具有五个领域的波斯文版BEARS问卷(就寝时间问题、过度嗜睡、夜间觉醒、睡眠规律性、打鼾)。计算并比较学前组和学龄组在每个B-E-A-R-S类别中睡眠问题的患病率。
共为746名儿童(2至12岁)完成了BEARS问卷;学前年龄组(2至6岁)有325名(142名女性[43.7%]和183名男性[56.3%]),小学年龄组(7至12岁)有421名,平均年龄分别为3.93(±0.16)岁和9.63(±0.16)岁。两组中最常见的筛查问题都是白天过度嗜睡(分别为64.9%和62.9%)。就寝时间问题以及睡眠规律性和持续时间在学前年龄组中明显更为普遍(P<0.0002;优势比[OR]=1.98;95%置信区间[95%CI]:1.98 - 4.20;以及OR = 2.00;95%CI:1.41 - 2.84)。学前年龄组和学龄组之间的平均睡眠时间差异具有统计学意义(P<0.0001)。
当前调查显示,不同类型的睡眠问题相对较高,尤其是在学龄前和学龄儿童中以白天过度嗜睡的形式出现。就寝时间问题和规律性问题在学前年龄组中明显更为普遍。入学似乎对就寝时间问题和睡眠呼吸障碍起到积极作用。