Hong Xinyi, Farmer Cristan, Kozhemiako Nataliia, Holmes Gregory L, Thompson Lauren, Manwaring Stacy, Thurm Audrey, Buckley Ashura
National Institute of Mental Health Division of Intramural Research Programs: National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program.
National Institute of Mental Health Intramural Research Program.
Res Sq. 2024 Feb 14:rs.3.rs-3904113. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-3904113/v1.
Sleep plays a crucial role in early language development, and sleep disturbances are common in children with neurodevelopmental disorders. Examining sleep microarchitecture in toddlers with and without language delays can offer key insights into neurophysiological abnormalities associated with atypical neurodevelopmental trajectories and potentially aid in early detection and intervention.
Here, we investigated electroencephalogram (EEG) coherence and sleep spindles in 16 toddlers with language delay (LD) compared with a group of 39 typically developing (TD) toddlers. The sample was majority male (n = 34, 62%). Participants were aged 12-to-22 months at baseline, and 34 (LD, n=11; TD, n=23) participants were evaluated again at 36 months of age.
LD toddlers demonstrated increased EEG coherence compared to TD toddlers, with differences most prominent during slow-wave sleep. Within the LD group, lower expressive language skills were associated with higher coherence in REM sleep. Within the TD group, lower expressive language skills were associated with higher coherence in slow-wave sleep. Sleep spindle density, duration, and frequency changed between baseline and follow-up for both groups, with the LD group demonstrating a smaller magnitude of change than the TD group. The direction of change was frequency-dependent for both groups.
These findings indicate that atypical sleep EEG connectivity and sleep spindle development can be detected in toddlers between 12 and 36 months and offers insights into neurophysiological mechanisms underlying the etiology of neurodevelopmental disorders.
https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01339767; Registration date: 4/20/2011.
睡眠在早期语言发展中起着至关重要的作用,而睡眠障碍在神经发育障碍儿童中很常见。研究有语言延迟和无语言延迟幼儿的睡眠微结构,可以为与非典型神经发育轨迹相关的神经生理异常提供关键见解,并可能有助于早期发现和干预。
在此,我们调查了16名语言延迟(LD)幼儿与39名发育正常(TD)幼儿的脑电图(EEG)连贯性和睡眠纺锤波。样本中男性占多数(n = 34,62%)。参与者在基线时年龄为12至22个月,34名参与者(LD组n = 11;TD组n = 23)在36个月时再次接受评估。
与TD幼儿相比,LD幼儿的EEG连贯性增加,在慢波睡眠期间差异最为明显。在LD组中,表示性语言技能较低与快速眼动睡眠中较高的连贯性相关。在TD组中,表示性语言技能较低与慢波睡眠中较高的连贯性相关。两组的睡眠纺锤波密度、持续时间和频率在基线和随访之间都发生了变化,LD组的变化幅度小于TD组。两组的变化方向都与频率有关。
这些发现表明,在12至36个月的幼儿中可以检测到非典型睡眠脑电图连接性和睡眠纺锤波发育,并为神经发育障碍病因的神经生理机制提供了见解。
https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01339767;注册日期:2011年4月20日。