Snoring May Affect Kids' Mental Abilities
Five-year-old children who snore or
have sleep apnea -- the more serious disorder in which breathing
stops intermittently while they sleep-- score worse on tests of
memory and intelligence than unaffected kids, investigators report.
Dr. Daniel J. Gottlieb, at Boston
University School of Medicine, and colleagues studied a population-based
sample of 205 five-year-old children. According to questionnaires
filled out by parents, 30 percent of the children experienced
sleep-disordered breathing, defined as habitual snoring, loud
or noisy breathing when asleep or witnessed sleep apnea.
When the children were tested,
general intellectual ability appeared to be significantly worse
in those with sleep-disordered breathing.
The difference in IQ seen with
the condition was "more than twice that associated with ... modest
childhood lead exposure," Gottlieb's team points out in the Journal
of Pediatrics.
Other measures that were significantly
worse included scores on memory tests, attention/executive functioning
and behavioral control.
SOURCE: Journal of Pediatrics,
October 2004.
Reference
Source 101
October 29, 2004
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|