Lunsford-Avery Jessica R, Wu Jade Q, French Alexis, Davis Naomi O
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program, Durham VA Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States.
J Pediatr Psychol. 2025 Mar 1;50(3):266-271. doi: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsae107.
Elevated attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms in preschoolers are a risk factor for poorer psychiatric health, cognitive deficits, and social and academic impairment across the lifespan. The first-line treatment for these preschoolers, behavioral parent training (BPT), reduces children's disruptive behaviors and parenting stress, yet its impact on core ADHD symptoms is inconsistent. Early interventions targeting biological mechanisms linked to core ADHD pathophysiology are critically needed.
This topical review explores sleep dysregulation as a potential key target for early intervention for ADHD symptoms among preschoolers.
Sleep dysregulation is common in school-aged children with ADHD, and treating sleep improves core ADHD symptoms in older children. Cross-sectional and prospective research with preschoolers offers compelling evidence that sleep dysregulation and ADHD symptoms are closely linked over the course of early development. BPT and behavioral sleep medicine (BSM) interventions share an underlying theoretical framework and could be streamlined to target sleep in addition to daytime behaviors.
Novel early interventions targeting underlying biological mechanisms linked to core ADHD pathophysiology are critically needed to improve the trajectories of ADHD symptoms, comorbidity, and functional deficits for preschoolers with elevated ADHD symptoms. Sleep regulation is a promising mechanistic treatment target for this population, and future interventions may draw from the shared behavioral principles of BPT and BSM to target behaviors across the 24-hr period and employ scalable formats to optimize the number of families who can benefit from parent-based interventions targeting ADHD symptoms and sleep in early development.
学龄前儿童注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)症状加重是其一生中心理健康较差、认知缺陷以及社交和学业受损的风险因素。针对这些学龄前儿童的一线治疗方法——行为父母培训(BPT),可减少儿童的破坏性行为和父母压力,但其对ADHD核心症状的影响并不一致。迫切需要针对与ADHD核心病理生理学相关的生物学机制进行早期干预。
本专题综述探讨睡眠失调作为学龄前儿童ADHD症状早期干预的潜在关键靶点。
睡眠失调在患有ADHD的学龄儿童中很常见,治疗睡眠可改善大龄儿童的ADHD核心症状。对学龄前儿童的横断面研究和前瞻性研究提供了有力证据,表明在早期发育过程中,睡眠失调与ADHD症状密切相关。BPT和行为睡眠医学(BSM)干预措施有共同的理论框架,除了针对白天行为外,还可简化以针对睡眠问题。
迫切需要针对与ADHD核心病理生理学相关的潜在生物学机制开展新的早期干预措施,以改善ADHD症状、共病情况以及ADHD症状加重的学龄前儿童的功能缺陷轨迹。睡眠调节是这一人群有前景的机制性治疗靶点,未来的干预措施可能借鉴BPT和BSM共有的行为原则,针对24小时内的行为,并采用可扩展的形式,以优化能够从针对ADHD症状和早期发育睡眠问题的基于父母的干预措施中受益的家庭数量。