
Research view
Title: | Sleep profile in a sample of Egyptian school-aged children with depression |
Author: | Tarek Asaad , Ghada R.A. Taha , Iman Abu-Ella , Hosam Salah and Yasser A. Nasr |
Abstract: |
Background
Children with major depressive disorder often complain of subjective sleep
disturbances. Studies that assessed the prevalence and nature of subjective sleep
complaints in children and adolescents with depression showed controversial findings.
Many polysomnographic (PSG) studies have failed to find objective evidence of these
disturbances.
Aim
The aim of this study was to find out the following: (i) differences in sleep profile
between children with depression and healthy control; (ii) the relationship between
sleep profile disturbance and the severity of depression; (iii) the role of sex in sleep
profile disturbance of depressed children; (iv) the relationship between family history
of psychiatric disorders and sleep profile disturbance of depressed children.
Patients and methods
Participants were randomly selected according to certain inclusion and exclusion
criteria from the Child Psychiatry Clinic in the Institute of Psychiatry, Ain Shams
University Hospitals. Cases and controls were subjected to psychiatric institute sheet,
MINI Kid (Arabic version), IQ test, Children’s Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CSHQ)
(Arabic version), Children’s Depression Inventory Questionnaire and PSG.
Results
The study sample consisted of 30 children: 20 cases and 10 controls. A total of 60%
were boys and 40% were girls (for both cases and controls), with an age range
of 8–12 years (mean 9.95 years) for cases and 8–10 years (mean 10.3 years) for
controls. There were significant differences in many sleep parameters in cases
compared with controls including increased sleep latency, decreased sleep efficiency,
increased stages NI and NII, decreased stage NIII (deep sleep), decreased rapid eye
movement (REM) latency, increased bedtime resistance, increased time to sleep,
decreased sleep period and marked increase in sleep-related anxiety, with relevant
increased disorders of excessive somnolence (with no significance to age, sex, REM
sleep or REM density). Children’s Depression Inventory Questionnaire severity scores
were correlated with most of the CSHQ and PSG parameters.
Conclusion
Depressed children showed a significant distinct profile of sleep disturbance
compared with healthy normal controls. This profile is apparent both in clinical
parameters such as CSHQ and in PSG parameters. Specifically, bedtime resistance
and sleep period are strongly related to the severity of depression.
Keywords:
children, depression, sleep parameters, sleep profile
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Journal: | Middle East Current Psychiatry 2014, 21:63–71 |
Text: | |
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