Abstract

BackgroundThe data on the association of sleep duration and blood pressure in the pediatric age group have been mixed and most studies have focused on weekday sleep duration. The purpose of this study was to compare the weekday and weekend sleep patterns between children and adolescents with newly diagnosed primary hypertension and a normotensive control group.MethodsChildren and adolescents from a pediatric nephrology clinic, aged 6-18 years with newly diagnosed primary hypertension were compared to an age and sex matched normotensive control group from a general pediatric clinic. The questions about bed time and getting out of bed times from the Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire (PSQ) were used to obtain weekday and weekend bed time, getting out of bed time and sleep duration. The Pediatric Daytime Sleepiness Scale (PDSS) was used to assess subjective sleepiness.ResultsIn both groups of 60 subjects each, weekday total sleep time was similar. Subjects in both groups went to bed later and woke up later on the weekends. However, in the hypertensive group, weekend getting out of the bed time was earlier (8:52 AM ±93 min vs. 9:36 AM ±88 min, p = 0.013) and weekend catchup sleep was about 40 min less (62.8 ± 85.5 vs. 102.7 ± 84.9, p = 0.035). Hypertensive children perceived less subjective sleepiness (PDSS scores 8.28 ± 4.88 vs. 10.63 ± 5.41, p = 0.007). The p values were calculated after adjusting for body mass index (BMI), race, daytime nap, caffeine use, sleep related breathing disorder (SRBD) scale and periodic limb movement of sleep (PLMS) scale subcomponents of the PSQ.ConclusionsHypertensive children obtained less weekend catch up sleep and reported less subjective sleepiness compared to the control group. More weekend sleep may potentially mitigate the effect of weekday sleep deprivation on blood pressure.

Highlights

  • The data on the association of sleep duration and blood pressure in the pediatric age group have been mixed and most studies have focused on weekday sleep duration

  • Body Mass IndexStandard Deviation Score (BMI-SDS), systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) were significantly higher in the High blood pressure (HBP) group

  • While the sleep parameters on weekdays were similar between the groups, major findings from our study are that the subjects in the HBP group woke up earlier on weekends and obtained less catch up sleep on weekends compared to the normotensive control group

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The data on the association of sleep duration and blood pressure in the pediatric age group have been mixed and most studies have focused on weekday sleep duration. The purpose of this study was to compare the weekday and weekend sleep patterns between children and adolescents with newly diagnosed primary hypertension and a normotensive control group. It is important to understand the factors affecting blood pressure (BP) in children as elevated BP in childhood predicts BP in adulthood [1]. Childhood hypertension has been shown to cause target organ damage like left ventricular hypertrophy, increased carotid intimal thickness and microalbuminuria that are known to predict future cardiovascular events [2]. Etiology of hypertension in pediatric population is multifactorial and has been attributed to genetic, renal, endocrine, excess weight, sedentary lifestyle and sleep related factors.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call