Zhang Rui, Schwandt Melanie, Vines Leah, Volkow Nora D
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Laboratory of Neuroimaging, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-1013, USA.
National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-1013, USA.
medRxiv. 2024 Apr 7:2024.03.19.24303825. doi: 10.1101/2024.03.19.24303825.
Adolescents with disrupted rest-activity rhythms (RAR) including shorter sleep duration, later sleep timing and low physical activity levels have higher risk for mental and behavioral problems. However, it remains unclear whether the same associations can be observed for within-subject changes in RAR.
Our longitudinal investigation on RAR used Fitbit data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study at the 2-year (FL2: aged 10-13 years) and 4-year follow-up (FL4: aged 13-16 years). 963 youths had good-quality Fitbit data at both time points. In this study we examined changes in RAR from FL2 to FL4, their environmental and demographic contributors as well as brain and behavioral correlates.
From FL2 to FL4, adolescents showed decreases in sleep duration and physical activity as well as delayed sleep timing (Cohen's d .44-.75). The contributions of environmental and demographic factors to RAR changes were greatest to sleep timing (explained 10% variance) and least to sleep duration (explained 1% variance). Delays in sleep timing had stronger correlations with behavioral problems including greater impulsivity and poor academic performance than reductions in sleep duration or physical activity. Additionally, the various brain measures differed in their sensitivity to RAR changes. Reductions in sleep duration were associated with decreased brain functional connectivity between subcortical regions and sensorimotor and cingulo-opercular networks and with enhanced functional connectivity between sensorimotor, visual and auditory networks. Delays in sleep timing were mainly associated with grey matter changes in subcortical regions.
The current findings corroborate the role of sleep and physical activity in adolescent's brain neurodevelopment and behavior problems. RAR might serve as biomarkers for monitoring behavioral problems in adolescents and to serve as potential therapeutic targets for mental disorders.
休息-活动节律(RAR)紊乱的青少年,包括睡眠时间缩短、晚睡时间推迟和身体活动水平低,出现心理和行为问题的风险更高。然而,对于RAR的个体内变化是否存在同样的关联尚不清楚。
我们对RAR的纵向研究使用了青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究在2年随访(FL2:10至13岁)和4年随访(FL4:13至16岁)时的Fitbit数据。963名青少年在两个时间点都有高质量的Fitbit数据。在本研究中,我们研究了从FL2到FL4的RAR变化、其环境和人口统计学影响因素以及大脑和行为相关性。
从FL2到FL4,青少年的睡眠时间和身体活动减少,晚睡时间推迟(科恩d值为0.44 - 0.75)。环境和人口统计学因素对RAR变化的影响对晚睡时间最大(解释了10%的方差),对睡眠时间最小(解释了1%的方差)。晚睡时间推迟与行为问题的相关性更强,包括更大的冲动性和学业成绩差,比睡眠时间或身体活动减少更明显。此外,各种大脑测量指标对RAR变化的敏感性不同。睡眠时间减少与皮层下区域与感觉运动和扣带- opercular网络之间的大脑功能连接减少以及感觉运动、视觉和听觉网络之间的功能连接增强有关。晚睡时间推迟主要与皮层下区域的灰质变化有关。
目前的研究结果证实了睡眠和身体活动在青少年大脑神经发育和行为问题中的作用。RAR可能作为监测青少年行为问题的生物标志物,并作为精神障碍的潜在治疗靶点。