Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate possible associations between chronotype, weight, sleep problems, anxiety, and depression among children from 6 to 12 years of age.Method: One-hundred children aged between 6 and 12 years were randomly recruited in five pediatrician clinics in the capital city of Beirut, Lebanon. The protocol was approved by the ethics committee of Saint-Joseph University and Hotel-Dieu Hospital and an informed written formal consent was obtained from one of the parents. The Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children (CCTQ), the Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS)-Parent version, and the Children's Chronotype Questionnaire (CCTQ) were used.Results: The majority of the sample (47%) presented an intermediate chronotype. There was a shift toward evening chronotype with increased age and a significant association between electronic devices use and an evening chronotype. Higher sleep disturbances were also observed among children with an evening chronotype. In particular, disorders of initiating and maintaining sleep, non-restorative sleep, excessive somnolence, and total SDSC were significantly higher among evening type children in our study. Finally, major depression domain scores were significantly higher among children with an evening chronotype.Conclusions: Several findings of this study are important and explain factors associated to chronotype in children. Two important future perspectives can be highlighted: limiting electronic devices use among children in an effort to reduce circadian rhythm disturbances and identifying and treating sleep problems associated with eveningness, taking into account the possible presence of major depression among this population.

Highlights

  • Humans show cyclic rhythmicity in a wide range of psychological, cognitive, and physiological behaviors as well as in hormonal variations

  • The trait determining individual circadian preference in rhythm is known as Chronotype, Sleep, Weight, Anxiety, Depression chronotype, which is relative to cycles of external light and dark [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Our results showed a significant association between electronic devices use and an evening chronotype

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Summary

Introduction

Humans show cyclic rhythmicity in a wide range of psychological, cognitive, and physiological behaviors as well as in hormonal variations This natural rhythmicity is called the circadian rhythm and it affects several processes such as sleep-wake cycles, mood, hormone levels, cognition, and temperature. Studies among adolescents and adults have shown that eveningness was significantly associated with obesity when it is compared to morningness [13, 14] and evening chronotype was associated with changes in eating behavior [14,15,16] such as poor dietary control, high total calories and cholesterol intakes, consumption of a larger portion, latenight food intake, and a tendency to omit breakfast among adults [17, 18]. Sleep problems were found to be concurrent with anxiety, depression, conduct problems, and hyperactivity in both children [24, 25] and adolescents [26, 27]

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