Flom et al., 2017 |
Age: 12 months.
Mean age: 12.18
N = 111
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Healthy infants who had no known hearing, visual, neurological, or developmental disorders.
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Infant ethnicity:
Caucasian 65.5%
Asian 4.5%
Black 4.5%
Hispanic 1.8%
Native American 0%
Multiracial/Other 23.6%
Infants were classified into High HCC and Low HCC
Salivary Cortisol concentrations (SCC) were also measured at waking and bedtime and infants were classified to steep slope and flat slope.
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The Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire (BISQ; Sadeh, 2004) completed by mothers.
Infant nighttime sleep duration: time in hours that the infant typically spends asleep between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m.
Sleep disruption: number of night wakings (<2 times; >2 times per night).
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HCC (pg/mg):
86.26 ± 183.63.
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Infants who slept 10 h or more each night at 12 months had lower HCC than infants who slept less than 10 h.
Sleep disruption was higher for infants with flat slope/high HCC compared to infants with a steep slope/high HCC.
Higher infant HCC was associated with greater infant waking SCC, bedtime SCC, but not with diurnal slope.
Sleep disruption was not related to infant HCC at 12 months.
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Eythorsdottir et al., 2020
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Pre-school children having factors for overweight predisposition. |
Objective sleep characteristics (sleep duration, sleep latency and sleep efficiency) assessed by an ActiGraph GT3X during a continuous period of 5 days and nights. |
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Sleep characteristics were generally not associated with log transformed cortisol levels. |
Maurer et al., 2016 |
Healthy children born very preterm (<32nd gestational weeks):
Healthy children full term born:
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Healthy children at school age. |
Sleep was assessed using in-home polysomnography (PSG) during a single night at the children’s home.
Objective sleep indices were evaluated: sleep continuity, sleep efficiency and nocturnal awakening.
Sleep architecture (%): Stage 1 sleep, stage 2 sleep, SWS (SWS: Stages 3 and 4 sleep), REM sleep, and REM latency (min).
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A negative association between hair cortisone and child age; boys had significantly higher hair cortisol and cortisone levels than girls.
A negative association between sleep duration and child age; boys showed longer REM sleep latency than girls.
No other significant relations between sleep measures and child age.
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