Literature DB >> 31992417

Executive functions in preschool children with chronic insomnia.

Oliviero Bruni1, Maria Grazia Melegari1, Alice Esposito1, Stefania Sette1, Marco Angriman2, Marina Apicella1, Barbara Caravale1, Raffaele Ferri3.   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVES: Executive functions (EFs) in children with insomnia have not been sufficiently assessed in the literature. This study aimed to describe sleep patterns and habits and EF abilities in preschool children with insomnia, compared to healthy control patients, and to evaluate the relationships between sleep patterns and EFs.
METHODS: Two groups of children were recruited: 45 preschoolers with chronic insomnia (28 boys), aged 24-71 months and 167 healthy preschool children (81 boys) aged 24-71 months. Parents of all children completed two questionnaires to assess their children's sleep habits and disturbances, and their EFs with the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function - Preschool Version.
RESULTS: Children with chronic insomnia were found to wake up earlier, sleep less during the night, have more nighttime awakenings, and higher nocturnal wakefulness, compared to the control group. The chronic insomnia group showed significant impairment in all the EFs domains. Nocturnal sleep duration, nighttime awakenings, and nocturnal wakefulness correlated with inhibit, plan/organize, working memory, inhibitory self-control, emergent metacognition, and the global executive composite scores in the chronic insomnia group. In the control group, the number of nighttime awakenings correlated with inhibition, inhibitory self-control, and the global executive composite. Regression analyses showed a predominant role of insomnia factor in the association with EFs in both clinical and control groups.
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings confirm the link between sleep and "higher level" cognitive functioning. The preschool period represents a critical age during which transient sleep problems also might hamper the development of self-regulation skills and the associated neural circuitry.
© 2020 American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  executive functions; insomnia; preschool; sleep

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31992417      PMCID: PMC7053020          DOI: 10.5664/jcsm.8172

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med        ISSN: 1550-9389            Impact factor:   4.062


  46 in total

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