Life Sciences and Medical Research, The Roux Institute at Northeastern University, 100 Fore Street, Portland, ME, 04101, USA.
Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2024 Dec;54(12):4529-4539. doi: 10.1007/s10803-023-06187-0. Epub 2023 Nov 28.
Developmental changes in sleep in youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are understudied. In non-ASD youth, adolescents exhibit a "night owl chronotype" (i.e., later sleep/wake timing) and social jetlag (i.e., shifts in sleep timing across school nights and weekends), with corresponding sleep problems. The purpose of this study is to evaluate age trends in chronotype, social jetlag, and sleep problems in high-risk youth with ASD.
Youth with ASD (N = 171), ages 5-21 years old, were enrolled at the time of admission to specialized psychiatric units. Caregivers reported children's demographic information, habitual sleep timing, and sleep problems. Multivariate analyses evaluated the effect of age on chronotype, social jetlag, and sleep problems and the effects of chronotype and social jetlag on sleep problems. Covariates and moderators included sex, race, verbal ability, autism symptom severity, supplemental melatonin, and pubertal status.
Older age was associated with later chronotype, more social jetlag, fewer sleep anxiety/co-sleeping problems, fewer night waking and parasomnia problems, and more daytime alertness problems. The effect of age on chronotype was stronger for youth with greater social affective symptom severity. Mediation analyses showed that later chronotype statistically mediated the association between age and daytime alertness problems.
Youth with ASD may exhibit night owl chronotype behavior and social jetlag as they enter adolescence. Shifts toward a later chronotype may be exacerbated by autism severity and may contribute to alertness problems and sleepiness during the day. Chronotype is modifiable and may be leveraged to improve daytime functioning in youth with ASD.
发育过程中自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)青少年的睡眠变化尚未得到充分研究。在非 ASD 青少年中,青少年表现出“夜猫子型生物钟”(即较晚的睡眠/觉醒时间)和社交时差(即上学日和周末睡眠时间的变化),同时伴有相应的睡眠问题。本研究旨在评估 ASD 高风险青少年的生物钟类型、社交时差和睡眠问题的年龄趋势。
招募了 171 名年龄在 5-21 岁的 ASD 青少年,在专门的精神科病房入院时,他们的父母报告了孩子的人口统计学信息、习惯性睡眠时间和睡眠问题。多变量分析评估了年龄对生物钟类型、社交时差和睡眠问题的影响,以及生物钟类型和社交时差对睡眠问题的影响。协变量和调节变量包括性别、种族、语言能力、自闭症症状严重程度、补充褪黑素和青春期状态。
年龄越大,生物钟类型越晚,社交时差越大,睡眠焦虑/共睡问题越少,夜间醒来和睡眠障碍问题越少,白天警觉性问题越多。年龄对生物钟类型的影响在社交情感症状严重程度较高的青少年中更为明显。中介分析表明,较晚的生物钟类型在年龄与白天警觉性问题之间存在统计学上的中介作用。
随着青春期的到来,ASD 青少年可能会表现出“夜猫子型生物钟”行为和社交时差。自闭症严重程度可能会加剧生物钟类型的变化,并导致白天警觉性问题和嗜睡。生物钟类型是可调节的,可能会被用来改善 ASD 青少年的白天功能。