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Sleep disorders in children
“Sleep disorders affect children, behaviorally and cognitively, in day-to-day behavior and in school performance. It’s not just that the child cannot sit still or falls asleep – it affects their ability to solve problems, or to pay attention, sometimes in subtle ways,” says a senior research fellow at the University of Washington School of Nursing. She has co-authored papers on the effects of sleep disorders in children. The Pediatrics paper concerned children who demonstrated symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, but children do not need to have ADHD to suffer from the results of poor sleep.
There are other sleeping problems that are difficult to detect unless the child goes to a sleep lab for evaluation. Children appear to be more vulnerable than adults to upper airway resistance syndrome, or UARS. This can be caused in children when some parts of the body, like the head, air passages and nostrils, grow at a different pace than other parts of the body. During sleep, muscles relax, taking up more space in the airway than they do during waking hours. The result can be an obstructed airway. There can be many likely causes: some children may have naturally narrower airways than normal, or unusually large tonsils and/or adenoids can block air passages.
Whatever the cause of the sleep disorder, the effect is the same. Oxygen saturation drops in the blood, causing a condition called hypoxia. Hypoxia typically awakens the sleeper so they can breathe normally, thus interrupting the sleep pattern.
The pediatrician or other health care provider may suggest that the parent and child visit a sleep lab for evaluation. At a sleep lab, the child is monitored during sleep. The book “Solve Your Child’s Sleep Problems,” by Richard Ferber, M.D. is recommended. There are a variety of potential treatments, from the removal of tonsils and/or adenoids to medication for the underlying condition. Children have developing brains that need a lot of oxygen. If a brain is being starved for oxygen at night, that’s not good. It’s not even good for an adult – and it is especially bad for a developing brain. Published on 19th June 2002
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