Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2019 Sep;60(9):1021-1031. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13061. Epub 2019 Apr 29.
Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) experience greater sleep problems than their peers. Although adolescence is generally a developmental period characterized by insufficient sleep, few studies have used a multi-informant, multi-method design, to examine whether sleep differs in adolescents with and without ADHD.
Targeted recruitment was used to enroll an approximately equal number of eighth-grade adolescents (mean age = 13 years) with (n = 162) and without ADHD (n = 140). Adolescents and parents completed global ratings of sleep problems; adolescents, parents, and teachers completed ratings of daytime sleepiness. Adolescents wore actigraphs and completed a daily sleep diary for approximately 2 weeks.
Adolescents with ADHD were more likely than adolescents without ADHD to obtain insufficient sleep on school days (per diary) and weekends (per diary and actigraphy). Adolescents with ADHD were also more likely to report falling asleep in class and to have stayed up all night at least twice in the previous 2 weeks (14% and 5% reported all-nighters for ADHD and comparison, respectively). In regression analyses controlling for a number of variables known to impact sleep (e.g. pubertal development, sex, medication use, having an externalizing, anxiety, or depression diagnosis), ADHD remained associated with shorter diary and actigraphy school night sleep duration, adolescent- and parent-reported daytime sleepiness, and parent-reported difficulties initiating and maintaining sleep and total sleep disturbance. Controlling for other variables, the odds of being classified with clinically elevated parent-reported sleep disturbance were 6.20 times greater for adolescents with ADHD.
Findings provide some of the clearest evidence yet that adolescents with ADHD experience more sleep problems and sleepiness than their peers without ADHD. It may be especially important to assess for sleep problems in adolescents with ADHD and to evaluate whether existing sleep interventions are effective, or can be optimized, for use in adolescents with ADHD who also have sleep problems.
患有注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)的儿童比同龄人经历更多的睡眠问题。尽管青春期通常是一个睡眠不足的发育阶段,但很少有研究使用多信息源、多方法设计来检查有无 ADHD 的青少年之间睡眠是否存在差异。
采用目标招募的方式招募了大约数量相等的八年级青少年(平均年龄 13 岁),其中包括 ADHD 患者(n=162)和非 ADHD 患者(n=140)。青少年及其父母完成了睡眠问题的整体评分;青少年、父母和教师完成了白天嗜睡的评分。青少年佩戴活动记录仪并填写了大约两周的日常睡眠日记。
与非 ADHD 青少年相比,ADHD 青少年在上学日(根据日记)和周末(根据日记和活动记录仪)更有可能睡眠不足。ADHD 青少年也更有可能报告在课堂上入睡,并且在过去的两周内至少有两次通宵未眠(分别有 14%和 5%的 ADHD 和对照组报告通宵)。在控制了许多已知影响睡眠的变量(例如青春期发育、性别、药物使用、有外化、焦虑或抑郁诊断)的回归分析中,ADHD 仍与日记和活动记录仪记录的上学日夜间睡眠时间较短、青少年和父母报告的白天嗜睡、父母报告的入睡和维持睡眠困难以及总睡眠障碍有关。在控制其他变量的情况下,ADHD 青少年被归类为父母报告的睡眠障碍程度较高的可能性是对照组的 6.20 倍。
这些发现提供了迄今为止最清晰的证据之一,表明 ADHD 青少年比没有 ADHD 的同龄人经历更多的睡眠问题和嗜睡。在 ADHD 青少年中评估睡眠问题,并评估现有的睡眠干预措施是否对也有睡眠问题的 ADHD 青少年有效,或者是否可以优化这些措施,可能尤为重要。