Early Developmental Changes in Sleep in Infants: The Impact of Maternal Depression

被引:83
作者
Armitage, Roseanne [1 ]
Flynn, Heather
Hoffmann, Robert
Vazquez, Delia [2 ]
Lopez, Juan
Marcus, Sheila
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Sleep & Chronophysiol Lab, Dept Psychiat, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Dept Pediat, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
关键词
Infant sleep; circadian rhythms; depression; actigraphy; napping; CHILDHOOD;
D O I
10.1093/sleep/32.5.693
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
100204 [神经病学];
摘要
Objectives: This study evaluated whether sleep over the first 6 months of life was more disturbed in infants born to mothers who were depressed compared with infants from nondepressed mothers. Design: Actigraphy was recorded for 7 consecutive days starting at 2 weeks postpartum and monthly thereafter until 6 months of age. Mothers completed daily sleep/wake diaries. Sleep data at 2 weeks and 6 months postpartum are presented here. Setting: The home environment. Participants: Eighteen healthy, full-term infants, 9 males and 9 females. Seven infants were born to women with no personal or family history of depression; 11 infants were born to women diagnosed with depression or with elevated levels of depression symptoms. Interventions: N/A. Measurements and Results: Total sleep time, sleep latency, sleep efficiency, and number and duration of sleep episodes were computed for nocturnal and daytime sleep in each 24-hour block. Data were coded for risk group (1 = low risk, 2 = high risk), and repeated-measures multivariate analysis of variance contrasted changes in sleep measures at Week 2 and Week 24, between risk groups. The high-risk infants took longer to fall asleep, had lower sleep efficiencies, and had more sleep bouts in the nocturnal sleep period than did low-risk infants. These effects persisted at 6 months postpartum. Conclusions: Maternal depression is associated with significant sleep disturbance in infancy at 2 weeks postpartum that continues through 24 weeks. It remains to be determined if sleep disturbance in infancy confers a greater risk of developing early-onset depression in childhood.
引用
收藏
页码:693 / 696
页数:4
相关论文
共 10 条
[1]
Armitage R, 2006, CLIN EEG NEUROSCI, V37, P1
[2]
Rest-activity cycles in childhood and adolescent depression [J].
Armitage, R ;
Hoffmann, R ;
Emslie, G ;
Rintelman, J ;
Moore, J ;
Lewis, K .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2004, 43 (06) :761-769
[3]
Comparison of Beck Depression Inventories-IA and -II in psychiatric outpatients [J].
Beck, AT ;
Steer, RA ;
Ball, R ;
Ranieri, WF .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT, 1996, 67 (03) :588-597
[4]
Sleep disturbances in depressed pregnant women and their newborns [J].
Field, Tiffany ;
Diego, Miguel ;
Hernandez-Reif, Maria ;
Figueiredo, Barbara ;
Schanberg, Saul ;
Kuhn, Cynthia .
INFANT BEHAVIOR & DEVELOPMENT, 2007, 30 (01) :127-133
[5]
The development of circadian rhythms in a human infant [J].
McGraw, K ;
Hoffmann, R ;
Harker, C ;
Herman, JH .
SLEEP, 1999, 22 (03) :303-310
[6]
Temporal coherence in Ultradian sleep EEG rhythms in a never-depressed, high-risk cohort of female adolescents [J].
Morehouse, RL ;
Kusumakar, V ;
Kutcher, SP ;
LeBlanc, J ;
Armitage, R .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2002, 51 (06) :446-456
[7]
Sex and age differences in sleep macroarchitecture in childhood and adolescent depression [J].
Robert, Jennifer J. T. ;
Hoffmann, Robert F. ;
Emslie, Graham J. ;
Hughes, Carroll ;
Rintelmann, Jeanne ;
Moore, Jarette ;
Armitage, Roseanne .
SLEEP, 2006, 29 (03) :351-358
[8]
Actigraphy correctly predicts sleep behavior in infants who are younger than six months, when compared with polysomnography [J].
So, K ;
Buckley, P ;
Adamson, TM ;
Horne, RSC .
PEDIATRIC RESEARCH, 2005, 58 (04) :761-765
[9]
Relationship between sleep/wake patterns, temperament and overall development in term infants over the first year of life [J].
Spruyt, Karen ;
Aitken, Rebecca J. ;
So, Kevin ;
Charlton, Margaret ;
Adamson, T. Michael ;
Horne, Rosemary S. C. .
EARLY HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, 2008, 84 (05) :289-296
[10]
A behavioral-educational intervention to promote maternal and infant sleep: A pilot randomized, controlled trial [J].
Stremler, Robyn ;
Hodnett, Ellen ;
Lee, Kathryn ;
MacMillan, Shauna ;
Mill, Catriona ;
Ongcangco, Lisa ;
Willan, Andrew .
SLEEP, 2006, 29 (12) :1609-1615