Sleep regularity in adolescents: Associations with sleep, rest–activity indices, and prospective substance use and depression

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Sleep Research Pub Date : 2025-02-02 DOI:10.1111/jsr.14468
Rachel F. L. Walsh, Mackenzie A. Maddox, Logan T. Smith, Thomas Olino, Phyllis C. Zee, Robin Nusslock, Lauren B. Alloy
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Abstract

Sleep is important for adolescent development and has been linked to a variety of mental health difficulties. New research suggests that sleep irregularity may be more clinically relevant than relying on mean values. This study aimed to (1) quantify the relationship between the sleep regularity index (SRI), a novel parameter reflecting the probability that an individual will be in the same state [asleep or awake] 24 h apart, and other actigraphy-derived sleep and rest–activity metrics, (2) evaluate concurrent and prospective associations between the SRI and mental health symptoms (depressive symptoms and substance use), and (3) test sex as a moderator. At baseline, a community-based sample of adolescents (n = 295, 56.27% female, 58.98% White, age = 15.44) wore an actiwatch for 1 week to measure rest–activity rhythms and sleep–wake cycles. Actigraphy data were used to derive sleep metrics, SRI, and nonparametric rest–activity indices. Adolescents also completed self-report measures of substance use and depression at baseline and at 6-month follow-up. Partial correlations indicated that individuals with more sleep irregularity had less interdaily stability, less robust relative amplitude, lower sleep efficiency, shorter total sleep time, longer sleep onset latency, more social jetlag, and a later sleep midpoint. Regression analyses revealed that sleep irregularity was associated with a lifetime history of substance use, first-onset substance use, and a prospective increase in depressive symptoms, even after accounting for sleep duration and subjective sleep disturbances. The sleep regularity index may be a potential modifiable risk factor for enhancing adolescent mental health.

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青少年睡眠规律:与睡眠、休息活动指数、预期药物使用和抑郁的关系
睡眠对青少年的发展很重要,并且与各种心理健康问题有关。新的研究表明,睡眠不规律可能比依赖平均值更有临床意义。本研究旨在(1)量化睡眠规律指数(SRI)之间的关系,这是一个反映个体在24小时内处于相同状态(睡眠或清醒)的新参数,与其他活动记录仪衍生的睡眠和休息活动指标之间的关系;(2)评估SRI与心理健康症状(抑郁症状和物质使用)之间的同步和前瞻性关联;(3)测试性别作为调节因素。基线时,以社区为基础的青少年样本(n = 295,女性56.27%,白人58.98%,年龄15.44)佩戴活动手表1周,测量休息-活动节律和睡眠-觉醒周期。活动记录仪数据用于得出睡眠指标、SRI和非参数休息活动指数。青少年还在基线和6个月随访时完成了物质使用和抑郁的自我报告测量。部分相关性表明,睡眠不规律越严重的个体,其日间稳定性越差,相对振幅越弱,睡眠效率越低,总睡眠时间越短,睡眠开始潜伏期越长,社交时差越多,睡眠中点越晚。回归分析显示,睡眠不规律与终生药物使用史、首发药物使用史和抑郁症状的预期增加有关,甚至在考虑了睡眠时间和主观睡眠障碍之后也是如此。睡眠规律指数可能是促进青少年心理健康的一个潜在的可改变的危险因素。
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来源期刊
Journal of Sleep Research
Journal of Sleep Research 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.00
自引率
6.80%
发文量
234
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sleep Research is dedicated to basic and clinical sleep research. The Journal publishes original research papers and invited reviews in all areas of sleep research (including biological rhythms). The Journal aims to promote the exchange of ideas between basic and clinical sleep researchers coming from a wide range of backgrounds and disciplines. The Journal will achieve this by publishing papers which use multidisciplinary and novel approaches to answer important questions about sleep, as well as its disorders and the treatment thereof.
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