Associations between brain structure and sleep patterns across adolescent development

被引:22
|
作者
Jalbrzikowski, Maria [1 ]
Hayes, Rebecca A. [1 ]
Scully, Kathleen E. [1 ]
Franzen, Peter L. [1 ]
Hasler, Brant P. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Siegle, Greg J. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Buysse, Daniel J. [1 ,3 ]
Dahl, Ronald E. [4 ]
Forbes, Erika E. [1 ,2 ,3 ,5 ]
Ladouceur, Cecile D. [1 ]
McMakin, Dana L. [6 ]
Ryan, Neal D. [1 ]
Silk, Jennifer S. [2 ]
Goldstein, Tina R. [1 ]
Soehner, Adriane M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Psychol, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA
[3] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Clin & Translat Sci, Sch Med, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[4] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Publ Hlth, Berkeley, CA USA
[5] Univ Pittsburgh, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 USA
[6] Florida Int Univ, Dept Psychol, Miami, FL 33199 USA
关键词
sleep; gray matter structure; actigraphy; SURFACE-BASED ANALYSIS; HUMAN CEREBRAL-CORTEX; AGE-RELATED-CHANGES; GRAY-MATTER VOLUME; SLOW-WAVE ACTIVITY; CORTICAL THICKNESS; WHITE-MATTER; HEALTHY-INDIVIDUALS; HIPPOCAMPAL VOLUME; SEXUAL-DIMORPHISM;
D O I
10.1093/sleep/zsab120
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Objectives: Structural brain maturation and sleep are complex processes that exhibit significant changes over adolescence and are linked to many physical and mental health outcomes. We investigated whether sleep-gray matter relationships are developmentally invariant (i.e. stable across age) or developmentally specific (i.e. only present during discrete time windows) from late childhood through young adulthood. Methods: We constructed the Neuroimaging and Pediatric Sleep Databank from eight research studies conducted at the University of Pittsburgh (2009-2020). Participants completed a 11-weighted structural MRI scan (sMRI) and 5-7 days of wrist actigraphy to assess naturalistic sleep. The final analytic sample consisted of 225 participants without current psychiatric diagnoses (9-25 years). We extracted cortical thickness and subcortical volumes from sMRI. Sleep patterns (duration, timing, continuity, regularity) were estimated from wrist actigraphy. Using regularized regression, we examined cross-sectional associations between sMRI measures and sleep patterns, as well as the effects of age, sex, and their interaction with sMRI measures on sleep. Results: Shorter sleep duration, later sleep timing, and poorer sleep continuity were associated with thinner cortex and altered subcortical volumes in diverse brain regions across adolescence. In a discrete subset of regions (e.g. posterior cingulate), thinner cortex was associated with these sleep patterns from late childhood through early-to-mid adolescence but not in late adolescence and young adulthood. Conclusions: In childhood and adolescence, developmentally invariant and developmentally specific associations exist between sleep patterns and gray matter structure, across brain regions linked to sensory, cognitive, and emotional processes. Sleep intervention during specific developmental periods could potentially promote healthier neurodevelopmental outcomes.
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页数:12
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