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Purpose/aims: Sleep health is an understudied but potentially important outcome of joint air pollution and psychosocial stress exposures in children. This study examined children's sleep health outcomes in relation to air pollution (PM, NO, O; aim 1), adverse childhood experiences (ACEs; aim 2), and air-pollution-by-ACEs interactions (aim 3).
Methods: Participants were from ECHO-PATHWAYS, a three-cohort consortium. Aim 1 included 1166 participants across the three cohorts, and aims 2 and 3 included a subset of 719 participants from a single cohort. PM (μg/m), NO (ppb), and O (ppb) were estimated during early infancy (0-6 months) and early childhood (6 months-6 years) using geocoded residential histories and spatiotemporal prediction models. Children's lifetime exposures to 8 different types of ACEs were measured via parent report at child age 8-9 years. Sleep disturbance and sleep-related impairment outcomes were measured via children's self-report at age 8-9 years. Analyses included linear regressions, adjusting for a priori-selected confounders.
Results: Aim 1 results showed that, for every 1 IQR increase in early infancy NO, children scored 0.31 (95 % CI 0.01, 0.61) points lower on sleep-related impairment. Aim 3 results showed that, for every additional ACE, the difference in sleep-related impairment per IQR increase in early infancy and early childhood NO was 0.43 (95 % CI 0.08, 0.78) and 0.41 (95 % CI 0.08, 0.73), respectively (ps = 0.02). No other associations were observed.
Conclusion: We found little evidence of associations, with the exception of suggestive evidence for associations of NO and NO-by-ACE interactions with sleep-related impairment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2025.114638 | DOI Listing |
Sleep Health
September 2025
Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA. Electronic address:
Objective: To evaluate feasibility, acceptability, and initial effects of Sleeping Healthy, Living Healthy (SHLH), an integrated behavioral sleep-mind-body integrative health (MBIH) intervention to improve sleep health, among urban adolescents.
Methods: Sixty-one adolescents (66% female; 84% Hispanic/Latino; 25% Black or African American) who slept less than 8 h/weeknight from two NYC high school campuses were randomized to SHLH (n = 30) or an attention-control group (n = 31). Outcomes assessed at baseline, immediately postintervention, and 10 weeks postintervention included sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI)); PROMIS sleep-related impairment; stress and anxiety; and perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale).
Front Psychiatry
August 2025
Adult ADHD Service, Avon & Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership Trust, Bath, United Kingdom.
Introduction: Sleep-related disorders affect a significant number of individuals with ADHD, the most common of which has been found to be delayed sleep phase syndrome/delayed sleep onset. The presence of a sleep disorder can exacerbate ADHD symptoms and impair cognitive functions. Despite the significance of these issues, they are often overlooked, potentially leading to unsafe self-medication practices and illicit substance abuse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurol
August 2025
School of Physical Education and Sport, Ningxia Normal University, Guyuan, China.
Background: Sleep deprivation is prevalent in high-pressure environments and among shift workers, and may contribute to autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysregulation, contributing to cardiovascular diseases, mood disorders, and cognitive impairment. Heart rate variability (HRV), an important indicator of ANS function, reflects fluctuations in sympathetic and parasympathetic activity and is commonly used to assess the autonomic effects of sleep deprivation. However, existing studies exhibit considerable heterogeneity due to inconsistencies in HRV measurement methods, variations in deprivation duration, and inadequate control of confounding factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Parkinsons Dis
September 2025
Faculty of Medicine, Transilvania University Brasov, Romania.
Sleep problems are among the most frequently reported non-motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD), with a broad range of disorders: insomnia, REM sleep behavior disorder, restless legs syndrome, excessive daytime sleepiness, and sleep-related breathing disorders. These disturbances evolve in complexity across PD severity stages, significantly impact the patients' quality of life and may exacerbate motor and other non-motor symptoms. Neurodegenerative processes, impaired function of neurotransmitters, medication side effects, circadian rhythm dysfunction are among the most proposed mechanisms that may explain the frequent occurrence of sleep disorders in PD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrials
August 2025
Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Psychology, UiT - The Arctic University of Norway, 9037, Tromsø, Norway.
Background: Patients with persistent pain and comorbid insomnia often experience a dual burden with significant day- and nighttime impairments. This comorbidity is associated with health problems like depression and a self-perpetuating vicious circle in which pain and insomnia symptoms mutually reinforce each other. Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-i) has demonstrated efficacy in facilitating the behavioural and psychological changes necessary to improve sleep.
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