Sleep habits and neurobehavioural correlates in young children who snore
Sleep habits and neurobehavioural correlates in young children who snore
Background: children with sleep disordered breathing have fragmented
sleep, but less is known about other sleep behaviours and
their association with neurocognitive function.
Method: snoring children listed for adenoidectomy and/or tonsillectomy
were studied with non-snoring controls. SDB was assessed
by polysomnography (PSG). Parents completed the Children’s
Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CHSQ), Behavior Rating Inventory of
Executive Function (BRIEF) and Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
(SDQ). Objective neuropsychological assessment included
the NEPSY visual attention measure (VA)
Results: sixty-eight snoring children, mean age 4.6 years (SD 1.2),
59% boys, and 39 controls, 4.9 years (SD 1.2), 54% boys, were
recruited. Snoring children had higher CSHQ subscale scores:
bedtime resistance (Po0.000); sleep onset delay (Po0.01); sleep
duration (Po0.000); sleep anxieties (Po0.002); night waking
(Po0.000); parasomnias (Po0.000) and daytime sleepiness
(Po0.000). However, CSHQ subscales did not correlate with
apnoea/hypopnoea index, mean or min. SpO2 in snoring children.
Snorers had significantly worse BRIEF subscale T-scores and
emotional, hyperactivity and peer problems (SDQ sub-scales)
compared to non-snoring children. BRIEF global executive
composite correlated with all CSHQ subscales and SDQ total
score correlated with all but the sleep anxieties CHSQ subscale.
However, neither of these parental assessments correlated with
PSG respiratory measures. NEPSY VA was better in controls
(P50.03) but did not correlate with objective or subjective sleep
measures.
Conclusion: parents report diverse sleep problems and neurobehavioural
difficulties in young snoring children compared to controls.
These parental reports show a high degree of correlation. However,
PSG measures fail to correlate with parent reports of sleep
problems or neurobehavioural function. This may represent
parental reporting bias or temporal dissociation between the
origins of neurobehavioural impairment and PSG. Preliminary
post-operative assessment of snorers indicates improvement in
CSHQ and SDQ sub-scales but persistent executive function
difficulties. In support of parent reports, NEPSY VA measures
improve in the snoring group with a significant group by time
interaction (F (1.53)54.35, P50.42)
165-166
Hill, C.M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Harrison, D.
fd368c13-f185-41de-a326-e507b4366535
Hogan, A.M.
42ccf5b5-98d7-4ce7-b09a-ea482dfe8447
December 2008
Hill, C.M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Harrison, D.
fd368c13-f185-41de-a326-e507b4366535
Hogan, A.M.
42ccf5b5-98d7-4ce7-b09a-ea482dfe8447
Hill, C.M., Harrison, D. and Hogan, A.M.
(2008)
Sleep habits and neurobehavioural correlates in young children who snore.
Journal of Sleep Research, 17 (s1), .
Abstract
Background: children with sleep disordered breathing have fragmented
sleep, but less is known about other sleep behaviours and
their association with neurocognitive function.
Method: snoring children listed for adenoidectomy and/or tonsillectomy
were studied with non-snoring controls. SDB was assessed
by polysomnography (PSG). Parents completed the Children’s
Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CHSQ), Behavior Rating Inventory of
Executive Function (BRIEF) and Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
(SDQ). Objective neuropsychological assessment included
the NEPSY visual attention measure (VA)
Results: sixty-eight snoring children, mean age 4.6 years (SD 1.2),
59% boys, and 39 controls, 4.9 years (SD 1.2), 54% boys, were
recruited. Snoring children had higher CSHQ subscale scores:
bedtime resistance (Po0.000); sleep onset delay (Po0.01); sleep
duration (Po0.000); sleep anxieties (Po0.002); night waking
(Po0.000); parasomnias (Po0.000) and daytime sleepiness
(Po0.000). However, CSHQ subscales did not correlate with
apnoea/hypopnoea index, mean or min. SpO2 in snoring children.
Snorers had significantly worse BRIEF subscale T-scores and
emotional, hyperactivity and peer problems (SDQ sub-scales)
compared to non-snoring children. BRIEF global executive
composite correlated with all CSHQ subscales and SDQ total
score correlated with all but the sleep anxieties CHSQ subscale.
However, neither of these parental assessments correlated with
PSG respiratory measures. NEPSY VA was better in controls
(P50.03) but did not correlate with objective or subjective sleep
measures.
Conclusion: parents report diverse sleep problems and neurobehavioural
difficulties in young snoring children compared to controls.
These parental reports show a high degree of correlation. However,
PSG measures fail to correlate with parent reports of sleep
problems or neurobehavioural function. This may represent
parental reporting bias or temporal dissociation between the
origins of neurobehavioural impairment and PSG. Preliminary
post-operative assessment of snorers indicates improvement in
CSHQ and SDQ sub-scales but persistent executive function
difficulties. In support of parent reports, NEPSY VA measures
improve in the snoring group with a significant group by time
interaction (F (1.53)54.35, P50.42)
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Published date: December 2008
Additional Information:
Special issue. Abstracts of the 19th Congress of the European Sleep Research Society, 9-13 September 2008, Glasgow, UK. P230
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 70151
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/70151
ISSN: 0962-1105
PURE UUID: a1826824-442b-4de4-ac85-3d2390716bc4
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Date deposited: 05 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:42
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Contributors
Author:
D. Harrison
Author:
A.M. Hogan
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