Meltzer Lisa J, Wong Petrina, Biggs Sarah N, Traylor Joel, Kim Ji Young, Bhattacharjee Rakesh, Narang Indra, Marcus Carole L
Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO.
Respiratory Medicine Service, Department of Paediatric Medicine, KK Women's and Children's Hospital, Singapore.
Sleep. 2016 Jun 1;39(6):1219-24. doi: 10.5665/sleep.5836.
Few studies have examined the validity of actigraphy in school-aged children. The objective of this study was to examine the validity of a commonly used actigraph compared to polysomnography (PSG) in a sample of children age 5 to 12 y born prematurely, sleeping in their natural home environment.
148 children born preterm (85 boys and 63 girls), ages 5-12 y (mean = 9.3 y, standard deviation = 2.0) wore the Philips Respironics Actiwatch-2 for 1 night concurrently with comprehensive, ambulatory PSG in the child's home. Sleep outcome variables were sleep onset latency, total sleep time (TST), and sleep efficiency. Epoch-by-epoch comparisons were used to determine sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy. Secondary analyses examined differences between children with no sleep issues, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, and periodic limb movements in sleep (PLMS).
Actigraphy significantly underestimated TST (30 min) and sleep efficiency (5%). Actigraphy underestimated or overestimated sleep onset latency by at least 10 min for a third of the children. Sensitivity and accuracy were good at 0.88 and 0.84, respectively, whereas specificity was lower at 0.46. Differences between actigraphy and PSG for TST and sleep efficiency were greatest for children with PLMS.
This study adds to the small existing literature demonstrating the validity of actigraphy in middle childhood. Although actigraphy shows good sensitivity (ability to detect sleep), specificity (ability to detect wake) is poor in this age group. Further, the results highlight the importance of considering whether a child has PLMS when interpreting actigraphic data, as well as the difficulties in accurately capturing sleep onset latency with actigraphy.
很少有研究考察活动记录仪在学龄儿童中的有效性。本研究的目的是在5至12岁早产儿童于其自然家庭环境中睡眠的样本中,将一种常用的活动记录仪与多导睡眠图(PSG)相比较,以考察其有效性。
148名早产儿童(85名男孩和63名女孩),年龄5至12岁(平均 = 9.3岁,标准差 = 2.0),在其家中佩戴飞利浦伟康Actiwatch-2一晚,同时进行全面的动态PSG监测。睡眠结局变量为入睡潜伏期、总睡眠时间(TST)和睡眠效率。逐时段比较用于确定敏感性、特异性和准确性。二次分析考察了无睡眠问题、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停综合征和睡眠期周期性肢体运动(PLMS)儿童之间的差异。
活动记录仪显著低估了TST(30分钟)和睡眠效率(5%)。三分之一的儿童活动记录仪低估或高估入睡潜伏期至少10分钟。敏感性和准确性分别良好,为0.88和0.84,而特异性较低,为0.46。对于有PLMS的儿童,活动记录仪与PSG在TST和睡眠效率方面的差异最大。
本研究补充了现有的少量文献,证明了活动记录仪在童年中期的有效性。虽然活动记录仪显示出良好的敏感性(检测睡眠的能力),但在这个年龄组中特异性(检测清醒的能力)较差。此外,结果强调了在解释活动记录仪数据时考虑儿童是否有PLMS的重要性,以及用活动记录仪准确捕捉入睡潜伏期的困难。