Department of Pediatrics, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada.
Division of Respirology, Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Ontario, Canada.
Sleep Med. 2018 Aug;48:131-139. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2018.04.005. Epub 2018 Apr 30.
Both short sleep duration and sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) are associated with poor neurocognitive development. However, the co-contributions of short sleep duration and SDB on neurodevelopment in pre-school children are relatively unknown.
We assessed both sleep duration and SDB by quarterly questionnaire from three months to two years of age among Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development (CHILD) birth cohort participants. Group-based modeling determined trajectories of total, daytime, and nighttime sleep duration and SDB. Linear regression was used to assess the impact of sleep duration and SDB trajectories on cognitive (primary outcome) and language (secondary) development at two years of age as assessed by the Bayley Scale of Infant Development (BSID-III) (mean 100; standard deviation of 15).
Of the 822 CHILD Edmonton participants, 703 (86%) were still enrolled at two years of age with 593 having BSID-III data at two years of age. Trajectory analysis identified four total sleep durations phenotypes [short sleepers (17.9%), decline to short sleepers (21.1%), intermediate sleepers (36.9%) and long sleepers (24.1%)]. Compared to children with intermediate sleep durations, short sleepers had a 5.2-point lower cognitive development score at two years of age [standard error (SE) 1.7; p = 0.002]. Nocturnal sleep duration, compared to daytime sleep duration had the greatest effect on cognitive development. We also identified three SDB symptom trajectories [early-onset SDB (15.7%), late-onset SDB (14.2%), and persistent SDB (5.3%)] and 79.5% of children had no SDB symptoms. Children with persistent SDB also had a 5.3-point lower language score (SE 2.7; p = 0.05) compared to children with no SDB. SDB trajectories were not associated with cognitive development.
In a population-representative birth cohort study, both short sleep duration and SDB were associated with adverse neurodevelopment at two years of age. Children with short nighttime sleep duration had lowered cognitive and language scores and children with persistent SDB also had lower language scores.
睡眠时长过短和睡眠呼吸紊乱(SDB)均与神经认知发育不良有关。然而,学龄前儿童中睡眠时长过短和 SDB 对神经发育的共同作用尚不清楚。
我们通过加拿大健康婴儿纵向发展(CHILD)队列参与者从三个月到两岁的季度问卷评估了睡眠时长和 SDB。基于群组的建模确定了总睡眠时长、白天睡眠时长和夜间睡眠时长以及 SDB 的轨迹。线性回归用于评估睡眠时长和 SDB 轨迹对两岁时认知(主要结局)和语言(次要结局)发育的影响,评估工具为贝利婴幼儿发育量表第三版(BSID-III)(平均值为 100,标准差为 15)。
在 822 名 CHILD 埃德蒙顿参与者中,有 703 名(86%)在两岁时仍有入组,其中 593 名在两岁时有 BSID-III 数据。轨迹分析确定了四种总睡眠时间表型[睡眠不足者(17.9%)、睡眠时间减少的睡眠不足者(21.1%)、中间睡眠时间者(36.9%)和睡眠时间较长者(24.1%)]。与睡眠时间中等的儿童相比,睡眠时间较短的儿童在两岁时的认知发育评分低 5.2 分[标准误(SE)1.7;p=0.002]。与白天睡眠时长相比,夜间睡眠时长对认知发育的影响更大。我们还确定了三种 SDB 症状轨迹[早发性 SDB(15.7%)、晚发性 SDB(14.2%)和持续性 SDB(5.3%)],且 79.5%的儿童没有 SDB 症状。与没有 SDB 的儿童相比,持续性 SDB 儿童的语言评分也低 5.3 分(SE 2.7;p=0.05)。SDB 轨迹与认知发育无关。
在一项具有代表性的人群出生队列研究中,睡眠时长过短和 SDB 均与两岁时的不良神经发育有关。夜间睡眠时间较短的儿童认知和语言评分较低,持续性 SDB 儿童的语言评分也较低。