Huang Xiao-Na, Wang Hui-Shan, Chang Jen-Jen, Wang Lin-Hong, Liu Xi-Cheng, Jiang Jing-Xiong, An Lin
Department of Children Health, National Center for Maternal and Children Health, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China.
Department of Epidemiology, Saint Louis University College for Public Health and Social Justice, St. Louis, MO, USA.
World J Pediatr. 2016 Feb;12(1):66-75. doi: 10.1007/s12519-015-0012-8. Epub 2015 Mar 9.
Findings from prior research into the effect of feeding methods on infant sleep are inconsistent. The objectives of this study were to examine infants' sleep patterns by feeding methods and sleep arrangement from birth to eight months old.
This longitudinal cohort study enrolled 524 pregnant women at 34-41 weeks of gestation and their infants after delivery in 2006 and followed up until eight months postpartum. The study subjects were recruited from nine women and children hospitals in nine cities in China (Beijing, Chongqing, Wuhan, Changsha, Nanning, Xiamen, Xi'an, Jinan, and Hailin). Participating infants were followed up weekly during the first month and monthly from the second to the eighth month after birth. Twenty-four hour sleep diaries recording infants' sleeping and feeding methods were administered based on caregiver's self-report. Multivariable mixed growth curve models were fitted to estimate the effects of feeding methods and sleep arrangement on infants' sleep patterns over time, controlling for maternal and paternal age, maternal and paternal education level, household income, supplementation of complementary food, and infant birth weight and length.
Exclusively formula fed infants had the greatest sleep percentage/24 h, followed by exclusively breast milk fed infants and partially breast milk fed infants (P<0.01). Night waking followed a similar pattern. However, the differences in sleep percentage and night waking frequency between exclusively formula and exclusively breast milk fed infants weakened over time as infants developed. In addition, compared to infants with bed-sharing sleep arrangement, those with room sharing sleep arrangement had greater daytime and 24-hour infant sleep percentage, whereas those with sleeping alone sleep arrangement had greater nighttime sleep percentage.
Our data based on caregiver's self-report suggested that partial breastfeeding and bed-sharing may be associated with less sleep in infants. Health care professionals need to work with parents of newborns to develop coping strategies that will help prevent early weaning of breastfeeding.
先前关于喂养方式对婴儿睡眠影响的研究结果并不一致。本研究的目的是从出生到八个月大,按喂养方式和睡眠安排来研究婴儿的睡眠模式。
这项纵向队列研究在2006年招募了524名妊娠34 - 41周的孕妇及其产后婴儿,并随访至产后八个月。研究对象来自中国九个城市(北京、重庆、武汉、长沙、南宁、厦门、西安、济南和海林)的九家妇幼医院。参与研究的婴儿在出生后的第一个月每周进行随访,从第二个月到第八个月每月进行随访。基于照顾者的自我报告,采用24小时睡眠日记记录婴儿的睡眠和喂养方式。拟合多变量混合生长曲线模型,以估计喂养方式和睡眠安排对婴儿随时间变化的睡眠模式的影响,同时控制父母的年龄、父母的教育水平、家庭收入、辅食添加情况以及婴儿出生时的体重和身长。
完全人工喂养的婴儿24小时睡眠百分比最高,其次是完全母乳喂养的婴儿和部分母乳喂养的婴儿(P<0.01)。夜间醒来情况也呈现类似模式。然而,随着婴儿的成长,完全人工喂养和完全母乳喂养的婴儿在睡眠百分比和夜间醒来频率上的差异逐渐减小。此外,与同床睡眠安排的婴儿相比,分房睡眠安排的婴儿白天和24小时睡眠百分比更高,而单独睡眠安排的婴儿夜间睡眠百分比更高。
我们基于照顾者自我报告的数据表明,部分母乳喂养和同床睡眠可能与婴儿睡眠较少有关。医疗保健专业人员需要与新生儿父母合作,制定有助于防止过早断奶的应对策略。