| Literature DB >> 25530819 |
Simonne Cohen1, Russell Conduit2, Steven W Lockley3, Shantha Mw Rajaratnam3, Kim M Cornish1.
Abstract
Although there is evidence that significant sleep problems are common in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and that poor sleep exacerbates problematic daytime behavior, such relationships have received very little attention in both research and clinical practice. Treatment guidelines to help manage challenging behaviors in ASD fail to mention sleep at all, or they present a very limited account. Moreover, limited attention is given to children with low-functioning autism, those individuals who often experience the most severe sleep disruption and behavioral problems. This paper describes the nature of sleep difficulties in ASD and highlights the complexities of sleep disruption in individuals with low-functioning autism. It is proposed that profiling ASD children based on the nature of their sleep disruption might help to understand symptom and behavioral profiles (or vice versa) and therefore lead to better-targeted interventions. This paper concludes with a discussion of the limitations of current knowledge and proposes areas that are important for future research. Treating disordered sleep in ASD has great potential to improve daytime behavior and family functioning in this vulnerable population.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Low-functioning autism; Sleep difficulties in ASD; Treating sleep in ASD
Year: 2014 PMID: 25530819 PMCID: PMC4271434 DOI: 10.1186/1866-1955-6-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurodev Disord ISSN: 1866-1947 Impact factor: 4.025
ICSD-3 Classification of sleep disorders in children with ASD including descriptions and evidence
| ICSD-3 Classification | Sleep profile | Study | Sleep measures | Significant findings in ASD population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insomnia | Persistent difficulty with sleep initiation, maintenance, duration, consolidation, or quality. Includes bedtime resistance, frequent night awakenings, and/or an inability to sleep independently | Wiggs | Actigraphy and SQ | Increased sleep latency, night awakenings, and poor sleep efficiency |
| Malow | PSG and CSHQ | Poorer sleep efficiency, longer sleep latency, and frequent night awakenings (up to 2–3 h) | ||
| Goodlin-Jones | Actigraphy and SD | Less total sleep time (TST) compared to TYP children or those with a DD | ||
| Krakowiak | SQ | Higher sleep-onset factor scores and night awakenings compared to typical children | ||
| Souders | CSHQ, SD, and actigraphy | Behavioral insomnia evident in 66% of children with ASD compared to 45.9% in controls | ||
| Anders | Actigraphy and SD | ASD children aged 2–5 years slept less per 24-h period on average compared to controls | ||
| Giannotti | PSG and CSHQ | Children with regressive ASD ( | ||
| Sivertsen | Parent report | Prevalence of chronic insomnia was ten times higher in children with ASD symptoms compared to controls | ||
| Baker | Actigraphy and SD | Adolescents with ASD were three times more likely to have symptoms of insomnia than their TYP peers | ||
| Parasomnias | Undesirable physical experiences which occur within sleep or during arousal from sleep. Includes nightmares, wake screaming, complex movements, dreams, and automatic nervous system activity | Hering | Actigraphy and SQ | 54% of children with ASD had multiple and early night arousals |
| Doo | SQ, CSHQ, and actigraphy | All reported evidence of higher rates of parasomnias in children with ASD compared to comparison groups | ||
| Schreck | ||||
| Liu | ||||
| Goldman | CSHQ | Younger children with ASD had more parasomnias than older children | ||
| Circadian rhythm sleep-wake disorders | Alterations of the circadian time-keeping system, its entrainment mechanisms, or misalignment of the endogenous circadian rhythm and the external environment. Manifests in difficulty initiating and maintaining sleep | Giannotti | PSG and CSHQ | More than 10% of children with ASD were found to have sleep problems that varied by season due to fluctuations in light/dark cycles |
| Tordjman | Measures of melatonin | Elevated daytime and lower nocturnal melatonin in individuals with ASD compared with controls | ||
| Hayashi [ | SD, CSHQ, and PEQ | “Free-running” sleep (not entrained to 24-h), sleep-onset delay, and early morning awakening in children with ASD | ||
| Segawa [ |
CSHQ Child Sleep Habit Questionnaire, DD developmental disability, TYP typical development, PEQ Parenting Events Questionnaire, PSG polysomnography, SD sleep diary, SQ Sleep Questionnaire.
Studies exploring the relationship between sleep and challenging behaviors in ASD
| Study | Type of study | Participants | Measurements | Significant findings | Effect sizes ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schreck | Cross sectional | 55 parents of children with mixed ASD functioning aged 5–12 years | GARS, BEDS, and PSQ | Fewer hours of sleep per night predicted ASD severity score, social skill deficit, and stereotypic behavior | 0.33–0.34b |
| Liu | Cross sectional | 27 children with ASD symptoms, and 32 with other DD ( | ADOS, CHSQ, and PSQ | Hypersensitivity to stimuli, younger age, co-sleeping, medication, epilepsy, history of sleep problems, and ADHD was associated with sleep problems in individuals with ASD | 0.09a–0.31b |
| DeVincent | Cross sectional | Parents of children with PDD ( | Early childhood inventory-4 and PSQ | PDD children with sleep problems had higher rates of ADHD, oppositional behavior, and psychiatric symptoms compared to children without sleep problems | 0.22–0.26a |
| Goodlin-Jones | Cross sectional | 68 HFASD children, matched to 57 with DD, 69 TYP, aged 24–69 months | Actigraphy, MELC, VABC, ADOS, ADIR, MSEL, SD, CSHQ, ESS, and CBCL | Controlling for diagnosis and age, night-time sleep problems determined by parent report were significantly associated with decrements in daytime behavior | 0.30–0.43b |
| Mayes | Cross sectional | Parents of 477 children with a range of ASD diagnoses (aged 1–15) | CARS, PBS, PSQ, WISC, WPPSI, and GDS | Sleep problems increased with severity of ASD symptoms. Oppositional behavior, aggression, ADHD, and mood variability predicted sleep disturbance in ASD | 0.59c |
| Goldman | Cross sectional | 42 mixed ASD samples and 16 TYP children aged 4–10 years | PCQ, CSHQ, RBS-R, CBCL, PSG, and Actigraphy | Poor sleepers with ASD had more ADHD symptoms and more restricted and repetitive behaviors (RRBs) than good sleepers. Sleep fragmentation was correlated with more RRBs | 0.48b–0.69c |
| Moon | Case study | 3 children (aged 8–9 years) diagnosed with an ASD | Actigraphy, SD, CSHQ, CBCL, and PSQ | Daytime behavior improved for 2/3 ASD patients following an intensive sleep treatment |
|
| Rzepecka | Cross sectional | 187 parents with child aged 5–18 years with an ID and/or ASD from Scotland | ADOS, CSHQ, SCAS-P, and ABC | Sleep problems were the highest predictor of challenging behaviors in ASD | 0.62c |
| Henderson | Cross sectional | Parents of children aged 6–12 years with ASD, Asperger’s ( | CSBQ, CRQ, BRQ, CSHS, CSWS, and CBCL | In the ASD group, poor sleep quality and hygiene were related to higher levels of externalizing behaviors | 0.60c |
| Goldman | Cross sectional | Parents of 1,784 children, ages 2–18 with high-functioning autism (USA) | ADOS, CHSQ, and PCQ | Poor sleepers had a higher percentage of behavioral problems on all PCQ scales (e.g., aggression, RRBs, stereotypy, and hyperactivity) than good sleepers | 0.11a–0.34b |
| Sikora | Cross sectional | Parents of 1,193 children with mixed ASD diagnosis aged 4–10 years (USA) | CSHQ, VABS, and MSEL | Moderate-severe sleep problems in ASD resulted in higher daytime externalizing behavior and poorer adaptive skills than those with ASD with no sleep problems |
|
| Anders | Cross sectional | Parents of children with an ID ( | ADOS, ADIR, MSEL, CBCL, actigraphy, CSHQ, and WISC | Parent-reported sleep problem but not actigraphy recordings were associated with more core behavior problems in ASD | 0.12a–0.39b |
| Tudor | Cross sectional | Parents of 109 children with a diagnosis of ASD (aged 3–18 years) | CSHQ, GARS, and PECS board | Sleep-onset delay and duration was positively correlated with ASD severity and symptoms and was the strongest predictor of communication deficits and stereotypic behavior | 0.34b–0.51c |
| Park | Cross sectional | Parents of 166 ASD children and 111 unaffected siblings aged 4–15 years from Korea | ADIR, ADOS, CSHQ, WISC, and K-CBCL | Communication abnormalities and RRBs were associated with increased risk of sleep problems in ASD. ASD individuals had higher, internalizing, and externalizing problems compared to their unaffected siblings | 0.31–0.43b |
| Taylor | Cross sectional | Parents of children with an ASD ( | BEDS, WISC, WPPSI, MSEL, SIB-R, and VABS | Children who slept fewer hours per night had lower IQ, verbal skills, adaptive functioning, socialization, and communication skills | 0.40–0.44b |
| Holloway | Cross sectional | 1,583 ASD children from Autism Treatment Network aged 2–17 years | CSHQ, VABS, MSEL, Stanford Binet, CBCL, ADOS, and SSP | Anxiety, ASD severity, sensory sensitivity, and GI issues all predicted sleep disturbance. IQ positively predicted sleep disturbance | 0.17a–0.44b |
| Schwichtenberg | Cross sectional | ASD siblings ( | MSEL, ADOS, CBCL, and PCQ | For both groups, sleep problems were associated with elevated behavior problems (e.g., reactivity, anxiety, somatic complaints, withdrawal, inattention, and aggression) | 0.16–0.21a |
| Mannion | Cross sectional | Parents of 89 children and adolescents (aged 3–16) with mixed ASD subtypes in Ireland | ASD-CC, GSI, and CSHQ | Avoidant behavior, under-eating, and GI symptoms predicted sleep problems in individuals with an ASD | 0.46b–0.50c |
| May | Longitudinal | Gender-matched children with high-functioning autism ( | Conner’s third edition, SCAS, and CSHQ | The ASD group had more sleep disturbance than the TYP group. Sleep disturbance decreased over the year in children with ASD, and this was associated with improved social ability | 0.41b–0.69c |
| Richdale | Cross sectional | 27 adolescents with high-functioning autism (aged 15–16) and 27 matched TYP controls | SD, actigraphy, CSRQ, CED-S, DASS-21, and SAAQ | Sleep variables significantly accounted for 57% of the variance of daytime functioning symptoms of insufficient sleep in the high-functioning ASD group | 0.75c |
| Adams | Cross sectional | 548 children and adolescents (2–18 years), with ASD symptoms | ASD-CC | Individuals with severe sleep problems had higher levels of total challenging behaviors than those with mild sleep problems | −0.47b |
ABC Aberrant Behavior Checklist, ADIR Autism Diagnostic Interview (revised), ADOS Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, ASD-CC autism spectrum disorder co-morbid for children, ASD autism spectrum disorders, BEDS bedtime evaluation of disorders of sleep, BRQ Bedtime Routines Questionnaire, CARS Checklist for Autism Spectrum Disorders, CBCL Child Behavior Checklist, CES-D Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, CRQ Child Routine Questionnaire, CSBQ Children’s Social Behavior Questionnaire, CSHQ Child Sleep Habit Questionnaire, CSHS Children’s Sleep Hygiene Scale, CSRQ Chronic Sleep Reduction Questionnaire, CSWS Children’s Sleep-Wake Scale, DASS-21 Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale, DD Developmental disability, ESS Epworth Sleepiness Scale, GARS Gilliam Autism Rating Scale, GDS Gordon Diagnostic System, GI Gastrointestinal disorder, GSI Gastrointestinal Symptoms Inventory, HFASD High-functioning autism spectrum disorder, ID Intellectual disability, IQ Intellectual quotient, K-CBCL Korean Version of Child Behavior Checklist, MELC Mullen Early Learning Composite, MSEL Mullen Scales of Early learning, PEQ Parenting Events Questionnaire, PBS Pediatric Behavior Scale, PCQ Parental Concerns Questionnaire, PDD Pervasive developmental disorder, PPVT Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-III, PSG Polysomnography, PSQ Parental Sleep Questionnaire, RBS-R Repetitive Behavior Scales-revised, RRB Repetitive and restricted behaviours, SAAQ Sleep Anticipatory Anxiety Questionnaire, SCAS-P Spence Anxiety Scale Parent Version, SD Sleep diary, SIB-R Scales of Independent Behavior-Revised, SIB self-injurious behavior, SQ Sleep Questionnaire, SSP Short Sensory Profile, TYP typical development, VABC Vineland Adaptive Behavior Checklist, WISC Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, WPPSI Wechsler Preschool and Primary School Scale of Intelligence, x insufficient information provided to calculate effect sizes.
asmall (r ≥0.1), classification of effect size.
bmedium (r > 0.30), classification of effect size.
clarge (r > 0.5), classification of effect size.