Literature DB >> 15774839

Cyclicity of neonatal sleep behaviors at 25 to 30 weeks' postconceptional age.

Mark S Scher1, Mark W Johnson, Diane Holditch-Davis.   

Abstract

Previous sleep studies of preterm neonates describe the rudimentary expression of sleep state cyclicity after 30 wk postconceptional age (PCA), with stability over multiple cycles only after 36 wk PCA. The research objective for this study was to determine whether sleep state cyclicity was expressed in neonates of 25-30 wk PCA, using two criteria for state identification. Our neonatal sleep consortium includes a total cohort of 359 children who were healthy and medically ill neonates who were recruited from three obstetric-neonatal services and received multiple-hour EEG sleep studies. A subset of the 33 youngest preterm infants were selected to evaluate the first of serial 2- to 3-h EEG-sleep recordings to assess the presence of sleep state cyclicity. One neonatal neurophysiologist visually assigned EEG-sleep characteristics for each record. Rapid eye movement (REM) counts and EEG discontinuity were specifically chosen to assess whether sleep cyclicity was expressed. A combined measure of REM and EEG discontinuity were used in an autocovariance analysis to assess cycling and mean cycle duration. A mean cycle duration of 68 +/- 19 min with a range of 37-100 min was determined from the REM-EEG discontinuity state for 24 neonates. The remaining nine infants had absent or poor sleep cyclicity. Sleep state cyclicity is expressed for a majority of neonates between 25 and 30 wk PCA, reflecting an ultradian biologic rhythm during the early perinatal stage of brain development.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15774839     DOI: 10.1203/01.PDR.0000157678.84132.A8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Res        ISSN: 0031-3998            Impact factor:   3.756


  9 in total

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2.  Newborns' sleep-wake cycle development on amplitude integrated electroencephalography.

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Review 4.  The Visual Scoring of Sleep in Infants 0 to 2 Months of Age.

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Review 6.  Waking up too early - the consequences of preterm birth on sleep development.

Authors:  Laura Bennet; David W Walker; Rosemary S C Horne
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2018-06-02       Impact factor: 5.182

Review 7.  Early development of sleep and brain functional connectivity in term-born and preterm infants.

Authors:  Julie Uchitel; Sampsa Vanhatalo; Topun Austin
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8.  Neonatal pain in very preterm infants: long-term effects on brain, neurodevelopment and pain reactivity.

Authors:  Ruth Eckstein Grunau
Journal:  Rambam Maimonides Med J       Date:  2013-10-29

Review 9.  Sleep Disturbances in Newborns.

Authors:  Daphna Yasova Barbeau; Michael D Weiss
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  9 in total

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