4.6 Article

The effects of sleep disordered breathing on sleep spindle activity in children and the relationship with sleep, behavior and neurocognition

Journal

SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume 101, Issue -, Pages 468-477

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2022.11.028

Keywords

Sleep quality; Pediatric; Daytime functioning

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The study aims to investigate the relationship between sleep spindle activity and sleep quality, neurocognition, and behavior. It found that children with obstructive sleep disordered breathing (SDB) had reduced spindle activity during sleep, which may contribute to negative effects on attention, learning, and memory.
Study objectives: Obstructive sleep disordered breathing (SDB), has adverse neurocognitive and behav-ioral sequelae in children, despite conventional measures of sleep disruption being unaffected. There is growing evidence that sleep spindles may serve as a more sensitive marker of sleep quality. We inves-tigated the relationship between sleep spindles and sleep fragmentation and neurocognition across the spectrum of SDB severity in children.Methods: Children 3-12 years old referred for clinical assessment of SDB and age matched control children from the community were recruited and underwent polysomnography. Sleep spindles were identified manually during N2 and N3 sleep. Spindle activity was characterised as spindle number, density (number of spindles/h) and intensity (spindle density x average spindle duration). Children completed a battery of tests assessing global intellectual ability, language, attention, visuospatial ability, sensorimotor skills, adaptive behaviors and skills and problem behaviors and emotional difficulties.Results: Children were grouped into control, Primary Snoring, Mild OSA and Moderate/severe OSA, N 1/4 10/group. All measures of spindle activity were lower in the SDB groups compared to the Control children and this reached statistical significance for Mild OSA (p < 0.05 for all). Higher spindle indices were associated with better performance on executive function and visual ability assessments but poorer performance on auditory attention and communication skills. Higher spindle indices were associated with better behavior.Conclusion: The reduced spindle activity observed in the children with SDB, particularly Mild OSA, in-dicates that sleep micro-architecture is disrupted and that this disruption may underpin the negative effects of SDB on attention, learning and memory.Crown Copyright (c) 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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