Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Louisville, 317 Life Sciences Building, Louisville, KY, 40204, USA.
Sleep Disorders Center, Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
J Neurodev Disord. 2020 Nov 20;12(1):32. doi: 10.1186/s11689-020-09336-z.
Sleep problems have been shown to have a negative impact on language development and behavior for both typically developing children and children with a range of neurodevelopmental disorders. The relation of sleep characteristics and problems to language and behavior for children with Williams syndrome (WS) is unclear. The goal of this study was to address these relations for 2-year-olds with WS. Associations of nonverbal reasoning ability, nighttime sleep duration, and excessive daytime sleepiness with language ability and behavior problems were considered.
Ninety-six 2-year-olds with genetically confirmed classic-length WS deletions participated. Parents completed the Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire, which includes a Sleep-Related Breathing Disorder (SRBD) scale with a subscale measuring excessive daytime sleepiness, to assess sleep characteristics and problems. Parents also completed the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory: Words and Sentences to assess behavior problems and expressive vocabulary, respectively. Children completed the Mullen Scales of Early Learning to measure nonverbal reasoning and language abilities.
Parents indicated that children slept an average of 10.36 h per night (SD = 1.09, range 7.3-13.3), not differing significantly from the mean reported by Bell and Zimmerman (2010) for typically developing toddlers (p = .787). Sixteen percent of participants screened positive for SRBD and 30% for excessive daytime sleepiness. Children who screened positive for SRBD had significantly more behavior problems on all CBCL scales than children who screened negative. Children with excessive daytime sleepiness had significantly more attention/hyperactivity, stress, and externalizing problems than those who did not have daytime sleepiness. Individual differences in parent-reported nighttime sleep duration and directly measured nonverbal reasoning abilities accounted for unique variance in expressive language, receptive language, and internalizing problems. Individual differences in parent-reported daytime sleepiness accounted for unique variance in externalizing problems.
The relations of nighttime sleep duration, positive screens for SRBD, and excessive daytime sleepiness to language and behavior in toddlers with WS parallel prior findings for typically developing toddlers. These results highlight the importance of screening young children with WS for sleep problems. Studies investigating the efficacy of behavioral strategies for improving sleep in children with WS are warranted.
睡眠问题已被证明对正常发育儿童和各种神经发育障碍儿童的语言发展和行为有负面影响。目前尚不清楚睡眠特征和问题与威廉姆斯综合征(WS)儿童的语言和行为之间的关系。本研究的目的是针对 2 岁 WS 儿童解决这些关系。考虑了非言语推理能力、夜间睡眠时间和日间嗜睡与语言能力和行为问题的关联。
96 名经基因证实的经典长度 WS 缺失的 2 岁儿童参与了研究。父母完成了儿科睡眠问卷,其中包括睡眠相关呼吸障碍(SRBD)量表,该量表有一个测量日间嗜睡的子量表,以评估睡眠特征和问题。父母还完成了儿童行为检查表(CBCL)和麦克阿瑟-贝茨交际发展量表:单词和句子,以分别评估行为问题和表达词汇。儿童完成了穆伦早期学习量表,以衡量非言语推理和语言能力。
父母表示,孩子平均每晚睡眠 10.36 小时(SD=1.09,范围 7.3-13.3),与 Bell 和 Zimmerman(2010 年)报告的正常发育幼儿的平均值没有显著差异(p=0.787)。16%的参与者筛查出 SRBD,30%的参与者筛查出日间嗜睡。筛查出 SRBD 的儿童在所有 CBCL 量表上的行为问题都明显多于筛查出阴性的儿童。有日间嗜睡的儿童在注意力/多动、压力和外化问题上的得分明显高于没有日间嗜睡的儿童。父母报告的夜间睡眠时间和直接测量的非言语推理能力的个体差异解释了表达语言、接受语言和内化问题的独特差异。父母报告的日间嗜睡的个体差异解释了外化问题的独特差异。
夜间睡眠时间、SRBD 阳性筛查和日间嗜睡与 WS 幼儿语言和行为的关系与之前对正常发育幼儿的研究结果相似。这些结果强调了对 WS 幼儿进行睡眠问题筛查的重要性。有必要研究改善 WS 儿童睡眠的行为策略的疗效。