Kocevska Desana, Muetzel Ryan L, Luik Annemarie I, Luijk Maartje P C M, Jaddoe Vincent W, Verhulst Frank C, White Tonya, Tiemeier Henning
Generation R Study Group, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Sleep. 2017 Jan 1;40(1). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsw022.
Little is known about the impact of sleep disturbances on the structural properties of the developing brain. This study explored associations between childhood sleep disturbances and brain morphology at 7 years.
Mothers from the Generation R cohort reported sleep disturbances in 720 children at ages 2 months, 1.5, 2, 3, and 6 years. T1-weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) images were used to assess brain structure at 7 years. Associations of sleep disturbances at each age and of sleep disturbance trajectories with brain volumes (total brain volume, cortical and subcortical grey matter, white matter) were tested with linear regressions. To assess regional differences, sleep disturbance trajectories were tested as determinants for cortical thickness in whole-brain analyses.
Sleep disturbances followed a declining trend from toddlerhood onwards. Infant sleep was not associated with brain morphology at age 7. Per SD sleep disturbances (one frequent symptom or two less frequent symptoms) at 2 and 3 years of age, children had -6.3 (-11.7 to -0.8) cm3 and -6.4 (-11.7 to -1.7) cm3 smaller grey matter volumes, respectively. Sleep disturbances at age 6 years were associated with global brain morphology (grey matter: -7.3 (-12.1 to -2.6), p value = .01). Consistently, trajectory analyses showed that more adverse developmental course of childhood sleep disturbances are associated with smaller grey matter volumes and thinner dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
Sleep disturbances from age 2 years onwards are associated with smaller grey matter volumes. Thinner prefrontal cortex in children with adverse sleep disturbance trajectories may reflect effects of sleep disturbances on brain maturation.
关于睡眠障碍对发育中大脑结构特性的影响,人们了解甚少。本研究探讨了儿童期睡眠障碍与7岁时脑形态之间的关联。
来自Generation R队列的母亲报告了720名儿童在2个月、1.5岁、2岁、3岁和6岁时的睡眠障碍情况。使用T1加权磁共振成像(MRI)图像评估7岁时的脑结构。通过线性回归测试每个年龄的睡眠障碍以及睡眠障碍轨迹与脑容量(全脑容量、皮质和皮质下灰质、白质)之间的关联。为了评估区域差异,在全脑分析中测试睡眠障碍轨迹作为皮质厚度的决定因素。
从幼儿期开始,睡眠障碍呈下降趋势。婴儿期睡眠与7岁时的脑形态无关。在2岁和三岁时,每标准差睡眠障碍(一种常见症状或两种较少见症状),儿童的灰质体积分别减少-6.3(-11.7至-0.8)立方厘米和-6.4(-11.7至-1.7)立方厘米。6岁时的睡眠障碍与整体脑形态有关(灰质:-7.3(-12.1至-2.6),p值=0.01)。一致地,轨迹分析表明,儿童睡眠障碍更不利的发展过程与较小的灰质体积和较薄的背外侧前额叶皮质有关。
从2岁起的睡眠障碍与较小的灰质体积有关。睡眠障碍轨迹不利的儿童前额叶皮质较薄,可能反映了睡眠障碍对大脑成熟的影响。