4.5 Article

Sleep and Executive Functioning in Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury Survivors after Critical Care

Journal

CHILDREN-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/children9050748

Keywords

brain injury; sleep; pediatric; critical care

Categories

Funding

  1. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute [K23HL150229-01]

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Over 50,000 children are hospitalized annually for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and more than 50% of them develop sleep/wake disturbances (SWDs) after hospital discharge. This study found that SWDs are associated with worse executive function outcomes in children with TBI, suggesting that targeting SWDs may improve outcomes.
Over 50,000 children are hospitalized annually for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and face long-term cognitive morbidity. Over 50% develop sleep/wake disturbances (SWDs) that can affect brain development and healing. We hypothesized SWDs would portend worse executive function outcomes in children aged 3-18 years with TBI 1-3 months after hospital discharge. SWDs were defined using the Sleep Disturbances Scale for Children (t-scores >= 60). Outcomes included the Global Executive Composite (GEC, t-score) from the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, Second and Preschool Editions, and multiple objective executive function assessments combined through Principal Components Analysis into a Neurocognitive Index (NCI, z-score). Multiple linear regression evaluated associations between SWDs and executive function outcomes, controlling for covariates. Among 131 children, 68% had clinically significant SWDs, which were associated with significantly worse median scores on the GEC (56 vs. 45) and NCI (-0.02 vs. 0.42; both p < 0.05). When controlling for baseline characteristics and injury severity in multivariable analyses, SWDs were associated with worse GEC (beta-coefficient = 7.8; 95% Confidence Interval = 2.5, 13.1), and worse NCI (beta-coefficient = -0.4; 95% Confidence Interval = -0.8, -0.04). SWDs in children with TBI are associated with worse executive function outcomes after hospital discharge, and may serve as modifiable targets to improve outcomes.

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