Table 1.
Author | N | Mode of Sleep Assessment | Timing of Sleep Assessment | Mode of Development Assessment | Timing of Development Assessment | Correlations Between Sleep Characteristics and Mental Development |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Beckwith et al.75 | 53 premature infants | EEG | 40 weeks CA | Gesell Developmental Scale | 4, 9 months | tracé alternant during QS: 4 months, r = 0.32 9 months, r = 0.33 No significant association with QS |
2. Scher et al.76 | 16 preterm infants + 16 term infants | EEG | 1–2 weeks after birth, then monthly up to term age | BSID | 12 months, 24 months | ***No. of arousals, r2 = 0.6382, Adj r2 = 0.6053 |
3. Anders et al.77 | 24 premature infants | Time-lapse video recording | 2, 4, 8, 20, 24, 36, 52 weeks’ CA | BSID | 24, 52 weeks’ CA | Holding Time Index: 24 weeks conceptional age (CA), F = 5.9 Longest Sleep Period: 52 weeks CA, r = −0.40, F = 7.6 |
4. Scher78 | 50 healthy infants | Questionnaire, actigraphy | 10 months | BSID | 10 months | Sleep efficiency, r = 0.30 % of activity/minute of sleep, r = −0.30 # awakenings > 5 minutes, r = −0.37 |
5. Becker et al.79 | 29 healthy infants | EEG | 6 months | BSID | 1 year | REM Storms: Group 1, r = −0.65 Group 2, r = −0.88 |
6. Arditi-Babchuk et al.80 | 81 premature infants | Observation | 34 weeks CA | BSID | 6 months | Prediction of MDI at 6 months REM (β = 29, F = 5.96) No association between REM storms and MDI |
7. Freudigman et al.81 | 36 healthy newborns | Motility Monitoring System | Postnatal days 1 & 2 | BSID | 6 months | Longest sleep period, r = −0.42 Sleep-wake transition time, r = 0.36 |
8. Montgomery-Downs et al.82 | 35 healthy infants | Overnight polysomnogram | 8 months | BSID | 8 months | Snore-related arousals, r = −0.43, R2 = 0.18 |
9. Gertner et al.83 | 34 premature infants | Actigraphy | 32 & 36 weeks CA | BSID | 6 months | 36 weeks CA: Total night mean activity level, r = 0.373 Total sleep %, r = −0.349 Total night sleep %, r = −0.405 No significant associations with sleep assessed at 32 weeks’ CA No significant association with QS |
10. Borghese et al.86 | 49 premature infants | Motility Monitoring System | 36 weeks CA & 6 months | BSID | 6 months | Active Sleep: 36 weeks CA, r = −0.44 6 months, r = 0.34 Cyclicity: 36 weeks CA, r = −0.40 6 months, r = 0.43 No significant association with QS |
11. Whitney et al.87 | 100 premature infants | Motility Monitoring System | Weekly for 1st 5 weeks of life | BSID | 1 year, then biannually until age 3 | Neurodevelopmental group: > Time in waking active < Time in Active Sleep and QS < Active sleep bout length < Longest sleep period < State stability score |
12. Shibagaki et al.89 | 27 infants* | Overnight polysomnogram | 4 months–1 year | Tsumori-Inage Questionnaire | 4 months–1 year | Developmental quotient, r = 0.88, R2 = 0.78 |
13. Scher et al.90 | 100 infants** | Questionnaire | 4–6 months, 10–12 months | Harris Infant Neuromotor Test | 4–6 months, 10–12 months | Similar sleep patterns in infants with and without risks for developmental delays |
infants with developmental disabilities;
infants were divided into 4 groups based on risk for developmental delay;
unadjusted for prematurity
Key Aspects and Results of Studies Correlating Sleep and Mental Development. Study characteristics including number of infants, modes of sleep and development assessment, and timing of sleep and development assessments are provided. Significant correlations are provided between various sleep characteristics and mental development scores for each study as well.
Abbreviations: EEG = electroencephalogram; CA = conceptional age; BSID = Bayley Scale of Infant Development; QS = quiet sleep; r = correlation coefficient; R2 = squared multiple correlation; F = variance ratio