Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, Colorado.
National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia; and.
Pediatrics. 2019 Mar;143(3). doi: 10.1542/peds.2018-0492. Epub 2019 Feb 11.
: media-1vid110.1542/5984243260001PEDS-VA_2018-0492 BACKGROUND: Sleep problems can impact daytime behavior, quality of life, and overall health. We compared sleep habits in young children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and other developmental delays and disorders and in children from the general population (POP).
We included 2- to 5-year-old children whose parent completed all items on the Children's Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CSHQ) in a multisite case-control study: 522 children with ASD; 228 children with other developmental delays and disorders with autism spectrum disorder characteristics (DD w/ASD); 534 children with other developmental delays and disorders without autism spectrum disorder characteristics (DD w/o ASD); and 703 POP. Multivariable analysis of variance compared CSHQ mean total score (TS) and subscale scores between groups. Logistic regression analysis examined group differences by using TS cutoffs of 41 and 48. Analyses were adjusted for covariates.
Mean CSHQ TS for children in each group: ASD (48.5); DD w/ASD (50.4); DD w/o ASD (44.4); and POP (43.3). Differences between children with ASD and both children with DD w/o ASD and POP were statistically significant. Using a TS cutoff of 48, the proportion of children with sleep problems was significantly higher in children in the ASD group versus DD w/o ASD and POP groups (adjusted odds ratios [95% confidence intervals]: 2.12 [1.57 to 2.87] and 2.37 [1.75 to 3.22], respectively).
Sleep problems are more than twice as common in young children with ASD and DD w/ASD. Screening for sleep problems is important in young children to facilitate provision of appropriate interventions.
媒体-1vid110.1542/5984243260001PEDS-VA_2018-0492
睡眠问题会影响儿童日间行为、生活质量和整体健康。我们比较了自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)和其他发育迟缓及障碍儿童以及普通人群(POP)的睡眠习惯。
我们纳入了在多中心病例对照研究中完成儿童睡眠习惯问卷(CSHQ)所有项目的 2-5 岁儿童:522 名 ASD 儿童;228 名具有 ASD 特征的其他发育迟缓及障碍儿童(DD w/ASD);534 名不具有 ASD 特征的其他发育迟缓及障碍儿童(DD w/o ASD);703 名 POP。多变量方差分析比较了各组 CSHQ 总分(TS)和分量表得分。使用 41 和 48 的 TS 临界值,逻辑回归分析检验了组间差异。分析调整了协变量。
每组儿童的 CSHQ TS 平均值:ASD(48.5);DD w/ASD(50.4);DD w/o ASD(44.4);POP(43.3)。ASD 儿童与 DD w/o ASD 和 POP 儿童之间的差异具有统计学意义。使用 TS 临界值 48,ASD 组儿童的睡眠问题比例明显高于 DD w/o ASD 和 POP 组(校正优势比[95%置信区间]:2.12[1.57 至 2.87]和 2.37[1.75 至 3.22])。
ASD 和 DD w/ASD 儿童的睡眠问题发生率高出两倍以上。在幼儿中筛查睡眠问题很重要,以促进提供适当的干预措施。