Bedtime to the brain: how infants’ sleep behaviours intertwine with non‐rapid eye movement sleep electroencephalography features

Author:

Schoch Sarah F.123ORCID,Jaramillo Valeria12456,Markovic Andjela17,Huber Reto248,Kohler Malcolm12,Jenni Oskar G.49,Lustenberger Caroline210,Kurth Salome127ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pulmonology University Hospital Zürich Zürich Switzerland

2. Center of Competence Sleep and Health Zürich University of Zürich Zürich Switzerland

3. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen The Netherlands

4. Child Development Center, University Children's Hospital Zürich Zürich Switzerland

5. Surrey Sleep Research Centre, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Surrey Guildford UK

6. Neuromodulation Laboratory, School of Psychology University of Surrey Guildford UK

7. Department of Psychology University of Fribourg Fribourg Switzerland

8. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Psychiatric Hospital University of Zürich Zürich Switzerland

9. Children's Research Center, University Children's Hospital Zürich, University of Zürich (UZH) Zürich Switzerland

10. Neural Control of Movement Lab, Institute of Human Movement Sciences and Sport, Department of Health Sciences and Technology ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

SummaryAdequate sleep is critical for development and facilitates the maturation of the neurophysiological circuitries at the basis of cognitive and behavioural function. Observational research has associated early life sleep problems with worse later cognitive, psychosocial, and somatic health outcomes. Yet, the extent to which day‐to‐day sleep behaviours (e.g., duration, regularity) in early life relate to non‐rapid eye movement (NREM) neurophysiology—acutely and the long‐term—remains to be studied. We measured sleep behaviours in 32 healthy 6‐month‐olds assessed with actimetry and neurophysiology with high‐density electroencephalography (EEG) to investigate the association between NREM sleep and habitual sleep behaviours. Our study revealed four findings: first, daytime sleep behaviours are related to EEG slow‐wave activity (SWA). Second, night‐time movement and awakenings from sleep are connected with spindle density. Third, habitual sleep timing is linked to neurophysiological connectivity quantified as delta coherence. And lastly, delta coherence at 6 months predicts night‐time sleep duration at 12 months. These novel findings widen our understanding that infants’ sleep behaviours are closely intertwined with three particular levels of neurophysiology: sleep pressure (determined by SWA), the maturation of the thalamocortical system (spindles), and the maturation of cortical connectivity (coherence). The crucial next step is to extend this concept to clinical groups to objectively characterise infants’ sleep behaviours ‘at risk’ that foster later neurodevelopmental problems.

Funder

Olga Mayenfisch Stiftung

UZH Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,General Medicine

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