| Literature DB >> 32943722 |
Tracy Riggins1, Rebecca M C Spencer2,3.
Abstract
Previous research has established important developmental changes in sleep and memory during early childhood. These changes have been linked separately to brain development, yet few studies have explored their interrelations during this developmental period. The goal of this report was to explore these associations in 200 (100 female) typically developing 4- to 8-year-old children. We examined whether habitual sleep patterns (24-h sleep duration, nap status) were related to children's performance on a source memory task and hippocampal subfield volumes. Results revealed that, across all participants, after controlling for age, habitual sleep duration was positively related to source memory performance. In addition, in younger (4-6 years, n = 67), but not older (6-8 years, n = 70) children, habitual sleep duration was related to hippocampal head subfield volume (CA2-4/DG). Moreover, within younger children, volume of hippocampal subfields varied as a function of nap status; children who were still napping (n = 28) had larger CA1 volumes in the body compared to children who had transitioned out of napping (n = 39). Together, these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that habitually napping children may have more immature cognitive networks, as indexed by hippocampal integrity. Furthermore, these results shed additional light on why sleep is important during early childhood, a period of substantial brain development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32943722 PMCID: PMC7499159 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-72231-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Relations between source memory performance and CA1 volume in the head of the hippocampus for younger (4–6 year old; left) and older (6–8 year old; right) children (adapted from Riggins et al.[26]). (B) Relations between performance on a mnemonic similarity task and CA2–4/DG volume in the hippocampus for younger (left) and older (right) children (adapted from Canada et al.[24]).
Figure 2Partial regression plot illustrating the relation between habitual 24-h sleep duration and source memory, controlling for age and sex (n = 180). Age grouping were determined via median split.
Figure 3Partial regression plot illustrating relations between 24-sleep duration and ICV-adjusted hippocampal head subfield volumes CA2–4/DG in (a) younger (n = 67) and (b) older (n = 70) children, after controlling for age and sex.
Descriptive statistics for nappers (n = 27–43) and non-nappers (n = 37–60) within the younger half of the sample.
| Nappers | Non-nappers | Group differences | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | ||
| Age (years) | 4.619 | .575 | 5.355 | .721 | |
| Source memory (% correct) | 13.83% | 15.55 | 15.95% | 15.62 | |
| 24-h sleep (min) | 631.500 | 69.107 | 615.000 | 45.964 | |
| Block design (SS) | 11.428 | 2.881 | 11.433 | 3.116 | |
| Vocab (SS) | 13.024 | 3.181 | 13.400 | 2.585 | |
| Subcortical gray matter volume (mm3) | 180,425.851 | 18,442.7305 | 187,647.162 | 12,121.734 | |
| Total gray matter volume (mm3) | 763,904.757 | 62,615.0560 | 775,710.237 | 51,612.3048 | |
| Intracranial volume (mm3) | 1,306,752.024 | 112,369.782 | 1,340,497.668 | 115,688.771 | |
| Amygdala (mm3) | 2,948.185 | 370.813 | 3,022.676 | 297.540 | |
Group differences in memory, sleep, estimates of IQ, and brain were examined using ANCOVAs, controlling for both age and sex.
ns not significant, SS scaled scores.
Figure 4Mean ICV-adjusted volumes for subfields in the hippocampal body in younger nappers (n = 28) versus younger non-nappers (n = 39). *p < .05.
Descriptive statistics for 24-h sleep duration, nap status from the Child Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CSHQ) for 184 participants (104 younger, 80 older), and percent correct on the source memory task for 193 participants (111 younger, 80 younger).
| All | Younger | Older | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age mean years (SD) | 6.19 (1.52) | 5.04 (.76) | 7.68 (.78) |
| 24-h sleep duration (mins) | 450–780 | 450–780 | 480–690 |
| 24-h sleep duration mean (SD) | 609.51 (52.44) | 622.07 (55.74) | 593.19 (42.94) |
| Napper (“Usually”, “Sometimes”) | 58 (12,36) | 43 (12,31) | 5 (0,5) |
| Non-napper (“Rarely”) | 130 | 60 | 70 |
| Not reported | 6 | 1 | 5 |
| Source memory mean percent correct (SD) | 22.82% (18.45) | 14.26% (15.24) | 34.40% (15.97) |