Winkler M R, Park J, Pan W, Brandon D H, Scher M, Holditch-Davis D
Duke University, School of Nursing, Durham, NC, USA.
Boston College, William F. Connell School of Nursing, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA.
J Perinatol. 2017 Sep;37(9):1047-1052. doi: 10.1038/jp.2017.91. Epub 2017 Jun 15.
The current study examined the relationship between sleep state development across the preterm and early post-term periods and subsequent growth trajectories from 1 to 27 months corrected age.
Retrospective analysis of data collected prospectively from 111 preterm infants (⩽34 weeks gestation) who participated in a multi-site longitudinal study. Separate longitudinal parallel process models were calculated for each sleep state (active and quiet sleep) and growth (weight, length and body mass index (BMI) Z-scores) variable to estimate the associations between their developmental trajectories.
Significant associations were identified between the trajectories of quiet sleep and weight, active sleep and weight, quiet sleep and BMI, and active sleep and BMI. No statistically meaningful associations were identified between the trajectories of early childhood length and the preterm sleep states.
Faster preterm period sleep development appears to predict more favorable early childhood growth trajectories, particularly for weight, indicating preterm sleep may be an important biomarker for subsequent growth outcomes.
本研究探讨了早产至足月后早期睡眠状态发展与1至27个月矫正年龄的后续生长轨迹之间的关系。
对参与多中心纵向研究的111名早产儿(孕周≤34周)前瞻性收集的数据进行回顾性分析。针对每个睡眠状态(主动睡眠和安静睡眠)和生长(体重、身长和体重指数(BMI)Z评分)变量计算单独的纵向平行过程模型,以估计它们发育轨迹之间的关联。
在安静睡眠与体重、主动睡眠与体重、安静睡眠与BMI以及主动睡眠与BMI的轨迹之间发现了显著关联。在幼儿身长轨迹与早产睡眠状态之间未发现具有统计学意义的关联。
早产期睡眠发展较快似乎预示着幼儿期更有利的生长轨迹,尤其是体重方面,这表明早产睡眠可能是后续生长结果的重要生物标志物。