Saad Wagma, Stremler Robyn, Birken Catherine S, Knight Julia A, Hung Rayjean J, Lye Stephen J, Matthews Stephen G, Levitan Robert D
University of Toronto, Institute of Medical Science, Toronto, ON, Canada.
The Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, Toronto, ON, Canada; Prosserman Centre for Population Health Research, Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute of Sinai Health, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Affect Disord. 2025 Apr 1;374:460-466. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2025.01.009. Epub 2025 Jan 6.
Childhood sleep problems are common and impact physical and emotional health. Prior work suggests that prenatal maternal depression and anxiety associate with disturbed child sleep in infancy. The current study evaluated whether these same associations extend to children at 3 years of age, and if so, whether the timing of symptoms in pregnancy is relevant.
This study included 490 mother-child dyads from the Ontario Birth Study. The dependent variables included child sleep latency, total sleep duration and nighttime awakenings at 3 years of age assessed via maternal reports. The main independent variables were maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire at 12-16 and 28-32 weeks of pregnancy. We used linear regressions to evaluate the predictive value of maternal symptoms on each sleep measure.
After controlling for potential confounding variables including maternal depression and anxiety scores at the time of the sleep assessments, there was a robust association between maternal depressive symptoms at 28-32 weeks of pregnancy and the number of child awakenings at age 3 (t = 3.08, p = .002). No significant associations between maternal prenatal anxiety and child sleep patterns were found in the multivariate analyses.
During weeks 28-32 of pregnancy, fetal exposure to maternal symptoms of depression associates with increased child awakenings at age 3 years. These results were not attributable to reporting bias related to maternal affective symptoms at the time of the sleep assessments. These findings point to a possible fetal programming effect on sleep that continues into the pre-school years.
儿童睡眠问题很常见,会影响身心健康。先前的研究表明,产前母亲的抑郁和焦虑与婴儿睡眠障碍有关。本研究评估了这些关联是否也适用于3岁儿童,如果适用,孕期症状出现的时间是否相关。
本研究纳入了安大略省出生队列研究中的490对母婴。因变量包括通过母亲报告评估的3岁儿童的睡眠潜伏期、总睡眠时间和夜间觉醒次数。主要自变量是在怀孕12 - 16周和28 - 32周时使用患者健康问卷评估的母亲抑郁和焦虑症状。我们使用线性回归来评估母亲症状对每项睡眠指标的预测价值。
在控制了包括睡眠评估时母亲的抑郁和焦虑评分等潜在混杂变量后,怀孕28 - 32周时母亲的抑郁症状与3岁儿童的觉醒次数之间存在显著关联(t = 3.08,p = 0.002)。多变量分析未发现母亲产前焦虑与儿童睡眠模式之间存在显著关联。
在怀孕28 - 32周期间,胎儿暴露于母亲的抑郁症状与3岁儿童觉醒次数增加有关。这些结果并非归因于睡眠评估时与母亲情感症状相关的报告偏差。这些发现表明,可能存在一种对睡眠的胎儿编程效应,这种效应会持续到学龄前。