Department of Psychological Sciences, Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck, University of London, London, UK.
Psychology Department, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2023 Aug;64(8):1200-1211. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13791. Epub 2023 Mar 29.
Children with neurodevelopmental disorders including autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) often experience sleep disturbances, but little is known about when these sleep differences emerge and how they relate to later development.
We used a prospective longitudinal design in infants with a family history of ASD and/or ADHD to examine infant sleep and its relation to trajectories of attention and later neurodevelopmental disorders. We formed factors of Day and Night Sleep from parent-reported measures (including day/night sleep duration, number of naps in the day, frequency of night awakenings and sleep onset problems). We examined sleep in 164 infants at 5-, 10- and 14-months with/without a first-degree relative with ASD and/or ADHD who underwent a consensus clinical assessment for ASD at age 3.
By 14-months, infants with a first-degree relative with ASD (but not ADHD) showed lower Night Sleep scores than infants with no family history of ASD; lower Night Sleep scores in infancy were also associated with a later ASD diagnosis, decreased cognitive ability, increased ASD symptomatology at 3-years, and developing social attention (e.g., looking to faces). We found no such effects with Day Sleep.
Sleep disturbances may be apparent at night from 14-months in infants with a family history of ASD and also those with later ASD, but were not associated with a family history of ADHD. Infant sleep disturbances were also linked to later dimensional variation in cognitive and social skills across the cohort. Night Sleep and Social Attention were interrelated over the first 2 years of life, suggesting that this may be one mechanism through which sleep quality influences neurodevelopment. Interventions targeted towards supporting families with their infant's sleep problems may be useful in this population.
患有神经发育障碍的儿童,包括自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)和注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD),经常出现睡眠障碍,但人们对这些睡眠差异何时出现以及与后来的发展有何关系知之甚少。
我们使用具有 ASD 和/或 ADHD 家族史的婴儿前瞻性纵向设计来检查婴儿的睡眠及其与注意力和后来的神经发育障碍轨迹的关系。我们从父母报告的测量中形成了白天和夜间睡眠的因子(包括白天/夜间睡眠时间、白天小睡次数、夜间觉醒频率和入睡问题)。我们在 164 名婴儿中检查了睡眠情况,这些婴儿在 5、10 和 14 个月时具有/不具有 ASD 和/或 ADHD 的一级亲属,并且在 3 岁时进行了 ASD 的共识临床评估。
到 14 个月时,具有 ASD 一级亲属(但不是 ADHD)的婴儿的夜间睡眠得分低于没有 ASD 家族史的婴儿;婴儿期较低的夜间睡眠得分也与后来的 ASD 诊断、认知能力下降、3 岁时 ASD 症状增加以及社会注意力(例如,看向面部)有关。我们没有发现日间睡眠有这种影响。
从 14 个月起,具有 ASD 家族史的婴儿以及具有后来 ASD 的婴儿可能会出现夜间睡眠障碍,而与 ADHD 家族史无关。婴儿的睡眠障碍也与整个队列中认知和社会技能的后期维度变化有关。夜间睡眠和社会注意力在生命的前 2 年是相互关联的,这表明睡眠质量可能通过这种机制影响神经发育。针对支持有婴儿睡眠问题的家庭的干预措施可能对这一人群有用。