Division of General Academic Pediatrics, Massachusetts General Hospital for Children, Boston, Mass; Department of Nutrition, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.
Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School/Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, Mass.
Acad Pediatr. 2017 Aug;17(6):625-632. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2017.02.001. Epub 2017 Feb 9.
To examine associations between insufficient sleep and neurobehavioral functioning in childhood as reported by mothers and teachers.
Participants were 1046 children in a prebirth cohort study. Main exposures were insufficient sleep durations at 3 time points: 6 months to 2 years, defined as sleep <11 h/d, 11 to <12 h/d (vs ≥12); 3 to 4 years, defined as sleep <10 h/d, 10 to <11 h/d (vs ≥11); and 5 to 7 years, sleep <9 h/d, 9 to <10 h/d (vs ≥10). Outcomes at age 7 years were executive function, behavior, and social-emotional functioning, assessed using the Behavioral Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Higher scores indicate poorer functioning. Mothers and teachers completed both instruments independently.
At age 7 years, mean (SD) mother and teacher report of the BRIEF global executive composite scale were 48.3 (7.9) and 50.7 (9.4) points, respectively, and of the SDQ total difficulties score was 6.5 (4.7) and 6.2 (5.7). In multivariable models, children who slept <10 h/d at 3 to 4 years had worse maternal-reported scores for the BRIEF (2.11 points; 95% confidence interval, 0.17-4.05) and SDQ (1.91 points; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-3.05) than those with age-appropriate sleep. Children who slept <9 h/d at 5 to 7 years also had worse scores. At both ages, associations with teacher-reported results were consistent with those of mothers. Infants who slept 11 to <12 h/d had higher teacher- but not mother-reported scores.
Insufficient sleep in the preschool and early school years is associated with poorer mother- and teacher-reported neurobehavioral processes in midchildhood.
通过母亲和教师报告,研究儿童时期睡眠不足与神经行为功能之间的关联。
参与者为一项产前队列研究中的 1046 名儿童。主要暴露因素为三个时间点的睡眠时间不足:6 个月至 2 岁,定义为睡眠<11 小时/天,11-<12 小时/天(vs≥12 小时/天);3-4 岁,定义为睡眠<10 小时/天,10-<11 小时/天(vs≥11 小时/天);5-7 岁,睡眠<9 小时/天,9-<10 小时/天(vs≥10 小时/天)。7 岁时的结果为执行功能、行为和社会情感功能,使用行为评定量表的执行功能(BRIEF)和长处和困难问卷(SDQ)进行评估。分数越高表示功能越差。母亲和教师分别独立完成这两项测试。
7 岁时,母亲和教师报告的 BRIEF 全局执行综合量表的平均(标准差)分别为 48.3(7.9)和 50.7(9.4)分,SDQ 总困难得分分别为 6.5(4.7)和 6.2(5.7)。在多变量模型中,3-4 岁时睡眠时间<10 小时/天的儿童,BRIEF(2.11 分;95%置信区间,0.17-4.05)和 SDQ(1.91 分;95%置信区间,0.78-3.05)的母亲报告得分更差,而睡眠时间符合年龄的儿童得分则更低。5-7 岁时睡眠<9 小时/天的儿童也有较差的得分。在这两个年龄,与教师报告结果的关联与母亲报告结果一致。睡眠时间 11-<12 小时/天的婴儿,教师报告得分较高,但母亲报告得分则不然。
学前和小学早期的睡眠不足与儿童中期母亲和教师报告的神经行为过程较差有关。