Study Links Snoring, Deficit Disorder
By LINDSEY TANNER
AP Medical Writer
CHICAGO (AP)--New research suggests children who snore face nearly double
the risk of being inattentive and hyperactive, providing fresh evidence
of an intriguing link between sleep problems and attention deficit disorders.
While the study doesn't answer whether one condition causes the other,
the researchers believe snoring and other sleep problems may be the culprit
in some cases because children often express sleepiness by being inattentive
and ``hyper.''
If it turns out to be true, this theory could help explain the paradox
over why stimulants such as Ritalin can effectively treat children with
conditions like attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder who already seem
over-stimulated, said Dr. Ronald Chervin, a University of Michigan neurologist
and sleep researcher, and the study's lead author.
``If there is indeed a cause-and-effect link, sleep problems in children
could represent a major public health issue,'' Chervin said. ``It's conceivable
that by better identifying and treating children's snoring and other nighttime
breathing problems, we could help address some of the most common and
challenging childhood behavioral issues.''
ADHD is the most common neurobehavioral disorder in childhood, affecting
between 4 percent and 12 percent of school-age children _ or as many as
3.8 million youngsters. Data cited by Chervin suggest that between 7 percent
and 12 percent of children snore frequently, with apnea--brief breathing
lapses during sleep that can cause snoring--present in up to 3 percent
of school-age children.
Numerous other studies have found a link between sleep problems and ADHD,
but many sleep specialists and psychiatrists are divided over which condition
might cause the other.
``There's absolutely a connection,'' said Dr. Stephen Sheldon, a sleep
specialist at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago. ``There is a proportion
of youngsters that have sleep pathology causing their daytime symptoms
that appear virtually identical to ADHD.''
Dr. Timothy Wilens, a child psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital
in Boston, is more skeptical.
``I would say the verdict is still out,'' said Wilens.
ADHD is thought to have a genetic cause and runs in families, Wilens
said. The sleep disturbances his research has found in ADHD children,
including restlessness and difficulty falling asleep, are likely the result
of behavioral problems, not vice versa, he said.
Chervin's study involving 866 children aged 2 through 13 is published
in the March issue of Pediatrics. It is based on surveys of parents about
their children's behavior and sleep patterns.
Parents rated their children's behavior based on a list of psychiatric
criteria for ADHD, which includes impulsiveness, inability to pay attention
and excessive activity. Parents weren't asked if their children had been
diagnosed with ADHD, which Chervin acknowledged limits being able to generalize
the results.
Overall, 16 percent were frequent snorers and 13 percent scored high
on the ADHD scale.
Among frequent snorers, 22 percent had high ADHD scores, compared with
only 12 percent among infrequent snorers.
Since snoring is often caused by apnea, which in turn is frequently caused
by large tonsils, removing the tonsils might in some cases improve behavior,
Chervin said.
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