Finkel Morgan A, Duong Ngoc, Hernandez Amanda, Goldsmith Jeff, Rifas-Shiman Sheryl L, Dumitriu Dani, Oken Emily, Shechter Ari, Woo Baidal Jennifer A
Division of Child and Adolescent Health, Department of Pediatrics, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY.
NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital, New York, NY.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2024;45(6):e560-e568. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000001311. Epub 2024 Aug 13.
The objective of this study was to quantify associations of infant 24-hour sleep duration and nighttime sleep consolidation with later child cognition.
This study included children from Project Viva, a prospective cohort in Massachusetts with (1) sleep measures in infancy (median age 6.4 months) and (2) child cognition in early childhood (median age 3.2 years) or mid-childhood (median age 7.7 years). Main exposures were parental reports of infant 24-hour sleep duration and nighttime sleep consolidation (% of total daily sleep occurring at nighttime). Cognitive outcomes were (1) early childhood vocabulary and visual-motor abilities and (2) mid-childhood verbal and nonverbal intelligence quotient (IQ), memory, and visual-motor abilities. We examined associations of infant sleep with childhood cognition using linear regression models adjusted for child sex, age, and race or ethnicity; maternal age, education, and parity; and household income.
Early and mid-childhood analyses included 1102 and 969 children, respectively. Most mothers reported infant race or ethnicity as White (69%) and were college graduates (71%). The mean infant 24-hour sleep duration was 12.2 ± 2.0 hours, and the mean nighttime sleep consolidation was 76.8% ± 8.8%. Infant 24-hour sleep duration was not associated with any early or mid-childhood outcomes. Higher infant nighttime sleep consolidation was associated with higher mid-childhood verbal intelligence (β: 0.12 points per % nighttime sleep; 95% CI, 0.01-0.22), but not with any early childhood cognitive measures.
In this cohort, higher infant nighttime sleep consolidation was associated with higher verbal IQ in mid-childhood. Future studies should investigate causal relationships of infant sleep consolidation with child cognition among diverse populations.
本研究的目的是量化婴儿24小时睡眠时间和夜间睡眠巩固与儿童后期认知之间的关联。
本研究纳入了来自“活力项目”的儿童,这是马萨诸塞州的一个前瞻性队列,该队列具备以下两点:(1)婴儿期(中位年龄6.4个月)的睡眠测量数据;(2)幼儿期(中位年龄3.2岁)或童年中期(中位年龄7.7岁)的儿童认知数据。主要暴露因素为父母报告的婴儿24小时睡眠时间和夜间睡眠巩固情况(夜间睡眠占每日总睡眠时间的百分比)。认知结果包括:(1)幼儿期的词汇量和视觉运动能力;(2)童年中期的言语和非言语智商(IQ)、记忆力和视觉运动能力。我们使用线性回归模型来研究婴儿睡眠与儿童认知之间的关联,并对儿童性别、年龄、种族或民族;母亲年龄、教育程度和生育次数;以及家庭收入进行了校正。
幼儿期和童年中期的分析分别纳入了1102名和969名儿童。大多数母亲报告婴儿的种族或民族为白人(69%),且母亲均为大学毕业生(71%)。婴儿24小时平均睡眠时间为12.2±2.0小时,夜间睡眠巩固的平均比例为76.8%±8.8%。婴儿24小时睡眠时间与幼儿期或童年中期的任何结果均无关联。较高的婴儿夜间睡眠巩固率与童年中期较高的言语智力相关(β:夜间睡眠每增加1%,增加0.12分;95%CI,0.01 - 0.22),但与幼儿期的任何认知指标均无关联。
在这个队列中,较高的婴儿夜间睡眠巩固率与童年中期较高的言语智商相关。未来的研究应调查不同人群中婴儿睡眠巩固与儿童认知之间的因果关系。