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Obstructive sleep apnoea contributes to executive function impairment in young children with Down syndrome

Obstructive sleep apnoea contributes to executive function impairment in young children with Down syndrome
Obstructive sleep apnoea contributes to executive function impairment in young children with Down syndrome
Objective/Background: children with Down syndrome (DS) commonly experience difficulties with executive function (EF). They are also vulnerable to obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). OSA is associated with EF deficits in typically developing children. A recent study reported an association between OSA and cognitive deficits in 38 school-aged children with DS. We experimentally investigated EF behaviours in young children with DS, and their association with OSA.

Participants and Methods: children with DS were recruited to take part in a larger study of OSA (N=202). Parents of 80 children (50 male) aged 36 to 71 months (M = 56.90, SD = 10.19 months) completed the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function - Preschool Version (BRIEF-P). Of these 80 children, 69 were also successfully studied overnight with domiciliary cardiorespiratory polygraphy to diagnose OSA.

Results: obstructive apnoea/hypopnoea index was in the normal range (0-1.49/h) for 28 children but indicated OSA (≥1.5/h) in 41 children. Consistent with previous research, we found a large effect for children experiencing particular weaknesses in working memory, planning and organising, whilst emotional control was a relative strength. OSA was associated with poorer working memory (β=.23, R2=.05, p=.025), emotional control (β=.20, R2=.04, p=.047) and shifting (β=.24, R2=.06, p=.023).

Conclusions: findings suggest that known EF difficulties in DS are already evident at this young age. Children with DS already have limited cognitive reserve and can ill afford additional EF deficit associated with OSA. OSA is amendable to treatment and should be actively treated in these children to promote optimal cognitive development.
Down syndrome, executive function, obstructive sleep apnea, sleep
1540-2002
Joyce, Anna
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Elphick, Heather
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Farquhar, Michael
ec24a05e-22e9-4e6e-81b1-6a85e6c0ccef
Gringras, Paul
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Evans, Hazel
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Bucks, Romola S.
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Kreppner, Jana
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Kingshott, Ruth
d832ca93-ead4-40f4-bfe6-eef0a5580208
Martin, Jane
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Reynolds, Janine
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Rush, Carla
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Gavlak, Johanna
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Hill, Catherine M.
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Joyce, Anna
d1a82273-7d20-4c88-bb27-671c75652f85
Elphick, Heather
b52520b9-6580-4ef9-8038-2d8a07baae9a
Farquhar, Michael
ec24a05e-22e9-4e6e-81b1-6a85e6c0ccef
Gringras, Paul
c6762f07-b124-4136-8cc1-a517044ae7ef
Evans, Hazel
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Bucks, Romola S.
95c31da3-2a01-45e7-a648-76d84a49edc4
Kreppner, Jana
6a5f447e-1cfe-4654-95b4-e6f89b0275d6
Kingshott, Ruth
d832ca93-ead4-40f4-bfe6-eef0a5580208
Martin, Jane
bb7a5243-8778-43fa-94fb-ea22a363211b
Reynolds, Janine
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Rush, Carla
c0e9a131-36be-4299-9427-1f72bd46baa4
Gavlak, Johanna
15bfdfeb-374b-4108-86c8-ec0a1dade98e
Hill, Catherine M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d

Joyce, Anna, Elphick, Heather, Farquhar, Michael, Gringras, Paul, Evans, Hazel, Bucks, Romola S., Kreppner, Jana, Kingshott, Ruth, Martin, Jane, Reynolds, Janine, Rush, Carla, Gavlak, Johanna and Hill, Catherine M. (2019) Obstructive sleep apnoea contributes to executive function impairment in young children with Down syndrome. Behavioral Sleep Medicine. (doi:10.1080/15402002.2019.1641501).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective/Background: children with Down syndrome (DS) commonly experience difficulties with executive function (EF). They are also vulnerable to obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). OSA is associated with EF deficits in typically developing children. A recent study reported an association between OSA and cognitive deficits in 38 school-aged children with DS. We experimentally investigated EF behaviours in young children with DS, and their association with OSA.

Participants and Methods: children with DS were recruited to take part in a larger study of OSA (N=202). Parents of 80 children (50 male) aged 36 to 71 months (M = 56.90, SD = 10.19 months) completed the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function - Preschool Version (BRIEF-P). Of these 80 children, 69 were also successfully studied overnight with domiciliary cardiorespiratory polygraphy to diagnose OSA.

Results: obstructive apnoea/hypopnoea index was in the normal range (0-1.49/h) for 28 children but indicated OSA (≥1.5/h) in 41 children. Consistent with previous research, we found a large effect for children experiencing particular weaknesses in working memory, planning and organising, whilst emotional control was a relative strength. OSA was associated with poorer working memory (β=.23, R2=.05, p=.025), emotional control (β=.20, R2=.04, p=.047) and shifting (β=.24, R2=.06, p=.023).

Conclusions: findings suggest that known EF difficulties in DS are already evident at this young age. Children with DS already have limited cognitive reserve and can ill afford additional EF deficit associated with OSA. OSA is amendable to treatment and should be actively treated in these children to promote optimal cognitive development.

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Paper - OSA & EF in DS Revised 2019 06 final - Accepted Manuscript
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Joyce et al (accepted) Obstructive sleep apnea EF in DS - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 July 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 July 2019
Keywords: Down syndrome, executive function, obstructive sleep apnea, sleep

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 432357
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432357
ISSN: 1540-2002
PURE UUID: da5cce83-64c9-4731-8a86-bda71c836615
ORCID for Hazel Evans: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9366-556X
ORCID for Jana Kreppner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3527-9083
ORCID for Catherine M. Hill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2372-5904

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:59

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Contributors

Author: Anna Joyce
Author: Heather Elphick
Author: Michael Farquhar
Author: Paul Gringras
Author: Hazel Evans ORCID iD
Author: Romola S. Bucks
Author: Jana Kreppner ORCID iD
Author: Ruth Kingshott
Author: Jane Martin
Author: Janine Reynolds
Author: Carla Rush
Author: Johanna Gavlak

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