sleep problems in infants and toddlers
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Sleep Problems in Infants and Toddlers. John A. Biever, MD Central Pennsylvania Institute for Mental Health Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry PennState Hershey Medical Center. Status of Diagnostic Thought. International Classification of Sleep Disorders - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Sleep Problems in Infants and Toddlers
John A. Biever, MDCentral Pennsylvania Institute for Mental
HealthClinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry
PennState Hershey Medical Center
Status of Diagnostic Thought
• International Classification of Sleep Disorders– Subcategorizes as dyssomnias, parasomnias and
sleep problems secondary to medical/psychiatric disorders
– Does not extend diagnostic criteria to infants and toddlers
• DSM-IV– Similar subcategorization as ICSD– Again, developmental norms do not extend to
infants and toddlers.
DC:0-3 Diagnostic Classification System for Infants/Toddlers
Sleep Behavior Disorders
– For children >12 months of age– Sleep-onset disorder: at least 4 weeks of needing
parental contact in order to get to sleep
– Night-waking disorder: at least 4 weeks of wakings that require parental attention
– Sleep problems also included as symptoms in several other disorders
A Proposed Alternative Classification System*
• Takes into account the relational component of sleep disturbances in infants/toddlers
• Considers, therefore, the status of the attachment bond between parent and child
• Considers the dual functions of homeostatic and social/affective regulation in the dyadic interaction
*Thomas Anders, Beth Goodlin-Jones and Avi Sadeh in Handbook of Infant Mental Health. Second edition. Guilford Press. 2000.
“Protodyssomnias”
• “Proto-” because they do not require “functional impairment” as does DSM-IV
• Night Waking Protodyssomnia
• Sleep-Onset Protodyssomnia
• Diagnostic criteria vary by age and severity
Night Waking Protodyssomnia*Age (months) Perturbation
(1 night/wk;2-4 wk duration)
Disturbance(2-4 nights/wk;
2-4+wk duration)
Disorder(5-7 nights/wk;>4 wk duration)
12-24 2 awakings(AW)/night and/or >10
min. AW
2 AW/nightand/or >10 min
AW
2 AW/nightand/or >10 min
AW
24-36 1-2 AW/nightand/or >20 min
AW
1-2 AW/nightand/or >20 min AW
1-2 AW/nightand/or >20 min AW
>36 1 AW/nightand/or >30 min AW
1 AW/nightand/or >30 min
AW
1 AW/nightand/or >30 min AW
Note: Occurs after infant has been asleep for >10 minutes. AW, awakenings from sleep that are accompanied by signaling (crying or calling).
*Thomas Anders, Beth Goodlin-Jones and Avi Sadeh in Handbook of Infant Mental Health. Second edition. Guilford Press. 2000.
Sleep-Onset Protodyssomnia*Age (months) Perturbation
(1 night/wk;2-4 week duration)
Disturbance(2-4 nights/wk;
2-4+week duration
Disorder(5-7 nights/wk;>4 wk duration
12-24 >30 min to fallasleep and/or parent remains in room for sleep onset and/or
more than 1 reunion
>30 min to fall asleep and/or parent remains
in room for sleep onset and/or more
than 1 reunion
>30 min to fall asleep and/or parent remains in room for sleep onset
and/or more than 1 reunion
>24 >20 min to fall asleep and/or parent remains
in room for sleep onset and/or more
than 1 reunion
>20 min to fall asleep and/or parent remains
in room for sleep onset and/or more
than 1 reunion
>20 min to fall asleep and/or parent remains in room for sleep onset
and/or more than 1 reunion
Note: Occurs at bedtime or nap time
Reunions refer to resistances to going to sleep. Reunions may differ in style: (1) repeated bids (kisses, hugs, glasses of water), or (2) struggles (crying, screaming, physical resistance), or (3) mixed. Reunions should be subclassified as to type.
*Thomas Anders, Beth Goodlin-Jones and Avi Sadeh in Handbook of Infant Mental Health. Second edition. Guilford Press. 2000.
Underlying Premises
• Unreasonable to classify sleep disturbances in infants <12 months of age (instead, look at the relationship/attachment)
• Assumes that child is sleeping in own bed• Child is being reared in a diurnal environment
(sleep at night, wake during day)
Clinical Interventions
• Perturbation: normal—reassurance with information
• Disturbance: at risk—parent education and guidance
• Disorder: more intensive treatment, individualized to the particular problem
Proposed Multiaxial Diagnostic System*
Axis I: Perturbation/disturbance/disorderNight waking protodyssomniaSleep-onset protodyssomniaSchedule disruption protodyssomnia (e.g. daytime napping)Parasomnias, sleep apnea
Axis II: Parent-child interaction stylesBalanced/synchronousOverregulating/controllingUnderregulating/distantInconsistent/unpredictable
*Thomas Anders, Beth Goodlin-Jones and Avi Sadeh in Handbook of Infant Mental Health. Second edition. Guilford Press. 2000.
Multiaxial System, cont’d.
Axis III: Infant FactorsTemperamentDevelopmental quotientMedical illnesses
Axis IV: Context factorsFamily/marital stressParenting stress/hassleFamily psychopathologyFamily trauma/violence
Neurobiology of Sleep
• Circadian rhythm: the 24 hour sleep-wake cycle
• Ultradian rhythm: the 60-90 minute sleep cycle of alternating REM (rapid eye movement) and non-REM phases of sleep
• Diurnal: the circadian cycle that gets entrained into light-dark conditions.
Infant Evolution of the Diurnal Cycle
• Average newborn daily sleep is 18 hours, ranging from 10 to 22, with typically a period of wakefulness every 3-4 hours.
• By 6 months, periods of sleep stretch out to as long as 6 hours, and begin to concentrate during dark hours, while wakefulness concentrated during light hours.
• By 1 year, typically 1-2 long nighttime sleep periods, 1-2 short daytime naps.
Later Evolution of Sleep
• Second year: one long nighttime sleep period and 1 nap, usually afternoon
• Later, nap may be eliminated depending on social circumstances, although naps may be preserved throughout life.
Ultradian Cycle Evolution
• 1st 3 months: 50% of sleep is REM (syn. “dream”, “active sleep”, “paradoxical sleep”), other half in n-REM (“slow wave”, “quiet”) sleep
• 2-3 y/o child: 35% REM
• Adult: 20% REM
Ultradian Cycle Evolution, cont’d.
• By 3 months of age, cycles remain at 50-60 minutes but REM duration diminishes.
• REM becomes more prominent in later phase of sleep (toward morning) and n-REM in earlier phase.
• By adolescence, cycle lengthens to 90 minutes.
Night Waking Problems
• By 8 months, most (60-70%) infants soothe selves when they awaken.
• During second year, often an increase in nighttime awakenings.
• Infants and toddlers have more awakenings than “signaled” (crying, etc.) awakenings. i.e. often they return to sleep without signaling.
Sleep-Onset Problems• Going-to-bed and falling-asleep problems.
• By 12 months, 70% infants placed in crib awake at night—gives them opportunity to learn to fall asleep on own
• 2nd yr. of life: separation anxiety, and also…– limited family time– maternal depression– marital problems
Parasomnias• Begin in toddlerhood• Boys > girls• Night terrors: stage 4 n-REM sleep (deepest
stage), normally outgrown by adolescence• Nightmares: REM sleep, child alert when they
cause awakening, unlike in night terrors. Reassurance and decreasing daytime stress are recommended.
• Rhythmic movements: 58% down to 22% by 2 years: parental reassurance, unless head banging is injurious.
Sleep Apnea• Central or obstructive: screen for asthma,
snoring, mouth breathing
• Normally, decreased oxygen saturation causes micro-arousal and restoration of breathing, with person unaware of the arousal.
• In children, apnea can cause inability to achieve stage IV sleep, resulting in diminished growth hormone secretion and growth retardation.
Causes of Sleep Problems
• Nutritional and/or physical discomfort, including food/milk allergies, colic
• Temperament, especially low sensory threshold, low adaptability, high distractibility, negativity of mood.
• Parental conflict, maternal psychopathology, family stress, traumatic events
Co-sleeping
• In infants, correlates with more sleep time at night, especially when breast-fed.
• More frequent, but brief arousals: Protective against SIDS?
• In older toddlers, is co-sleeping a cause or effect of sleep problems?
Assessment• Importance: ½ of children with infant-
toddlerhood sleep problems will continue to have sleep problems later on.
• Ask routine screening questions re the above, including child’s degree of rested-ness and wakefulness during the day.
• Suggest keeping a diary if sleep problem is suspected.
Treatment• Behavioral approaches, based on the idea that sleep-
onset problems represent learned interactional patterns between child and caregiver
• Interpersonal/psychodynamic approaches: looking at the relationship between caregiver and child for problems and for solutions
• The transitional object: thumb, special blanket
• Brief period of parent sleeping in same room