McCann Marie, Bayliss Donna M, Anderson Mike, Campbell Catherine, French Noel, McMichael Judy, Reid Corinne, Bucks Romola S
a School of Psychology , University of Western Australia , Crawley , Australia.
b School of Psychology and Exercise Science , Murdoch University , Murdoch , Australia.
Child Neuropsychol. 2018 Jan;24(1):124-144. doi: 10.1080/09297049.2016.1235144. Epub 2016 Oct 19.
In two studies, the relationship between sleep and working memory performance was investigated in children born very preterm (i.e., gestation less than 32 weeks) and the possible mechanisms underlying this relationship. In Study 1, parent-reported measures of snoring, night-time sleep quality, and daytime sleepiness were collected on 89 children born very preterm aged 6 to 7 years. The children completed a verbal working memory task, as well as measures of processing speed and verbal storage capacity. Night-time sleep quality was found to be associated with verbal working memory performance over and above the variance associated with individual differences in processing speed and storage capacity, suggesting that poor sleep may have an impact on the executive component of working memory. Snoring and daytime sleepiness were not found to be associated with working memory performance. Study 2 introduced a direct measure of executive functioning and examined whether sleep problems would differentially impact the executive functioning of children born very preterm relative to children born to term. Parent-reported sleep problems were collected on 43 children born very preterm and 48 children born to term (aged 6 to 9 years). Problematic sleep was found to adversely impact executive functioning in the very preterm group, while no effect of sleep was found in the control group. These findings implicate executive dysfunction as a possible mechanism by which problematic sleep adversely impacts upon cognition in children born very preterm, and suggest that sleep problems can increase the cognitive vulnerability already experienced by many of these children.
在两项研究中,调查了极早产(即孕周小于32周)儿童睡眠与工作记忆表现之间的关系以及这种关系背后的潜在机制。在研究1中,收集了89名6至7岁极早产儿童家长报告的打鼾、夜间睡眠质量和白天嗜睡情况。这些儿童完成了一项言语工作记忆任务以及处理速度和言语存储能力的测量。研究发现,夜间睡眠质量与言语工作记忆表现相关,超出了与处理速度和存储能力个体差异相关的方差,这表明睡眠不佳可能会对工作记忆的执行成分产生影响。未发现打鼾和白天嗜睡与工作记忆表现相关。研究2引入了执行功能的直接测量方法,并检验了睡眠问题是否会对极早产儿童的执行功能产生相对于足月儿的不同影响。收集了43名极早产儿童和48名足月儿(6至9岁)家长报告的睡眠问题。发现有问题的睡眠会对极早产组的执行功能产生不利影响,而在对照组中未发现睡眠有影响。这些发现表明执行功能障碍可能是有问题的睡眠对极早产儿童认知产生不利影响的确切机制,并表明睡眠问题会增加许多此类儿童已经经历的认知脆弱性。