Sleep and Anxiety Center of Houston (SACH), Department of Psychology, University of Houston, 126 Heyne Bldg, Houston, TX, 77204, USA.
Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev. 2018 Dec;21(4):482-499. doi: 10.1007/s10567-018-0267-4.
Children with anxiety disorders (AD) characteristically complain of sleep problems and the extent to which cognitive behavioral treatments (CBT) for childhood anxiety produce sleep-based improvements is a topic of increasing interest. The current paper reviews available evidence for subjective sleep complaints and objective sleep alterations in children and adolescents with AD, including investigations of potential changes in sleep following anxiety-focused CBT. Despite pervasive complaints of poor sleep, the empirical literature provides minimal evidence for actual sleep-wake alterations in this population of youth and evidence for sleep-based changes following treatment for anxiety is minimal. In line with calls for more comprehensive models of the role of sleep in developmental psychopathology, several fundamental gaps in understanding are described and highlighted as essential avenues for clarifying the nature and consequences of poor quality sleep among youth with clinical levels of anxiety. In a second section of the paper, an emerging body of novel, translational research investigating more intricate sleep-anxiety relationships is introduced with potential implications for both etiological models and treatment design and delivery.
患有焦虑障碍 (AD) 的儿童通常会抱怨睡眠问题,而认知行为疗法 (CBT) 对儿童焦虑症的治疗效果在多大程度上能改善睡眠,这是一个日益受到关注的话题。本文综述了 AD 儿童和青少年主观睡眠主诉和客观睡眠改变的现有证据,包括焦虑焦点 CBT 后睡眠潜在变化的研究。尽管普遍抱怨睡眠质量差,但实证文献几乎没有提供该人群青少年实际睡眠-觉醒改变的证据,而焦虑症治疗后基于睡眠的改变的证据也很少。为了更全面地了解睡眠在发展性精神病理学中的作用,本文描述并强调了几个理解上的基本差距,这些差距被认为是阐明具有临床焦虑水平的年轻人睡眠质量差的性质和后果的重要途径。在本文的第二部分,介绍了新兴的、转化研究领域,该领域探索了更复杂的睡眠-焦虑关系,这对病因模型和治疗设计与实施都具有潜在的意义。