4.5 Article

Longitudinal associations between adolescent catch-up sleep, white-matter maturation and internalizing problems

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 59, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101193

Keywords

Sleep; Adolescence; Brain Development; Internalizing; White Matter; DTI; MRI; Internalized symptoms; Anxiety; Depression; Prevention; Longitudinal; Cohort; Adolescents

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Sleep is crucial for neural maturation and emotion regulation in adolescents, and can have long-term effects on white matter development and affective processing in at-risk individuals. This study examined the relationship between sleep patterns and internalizing problems in adolescents aged 14-19 years. The results showed that increased weekend sleep duration and variability in sleep duration between weekdays and weekends were associated with improved white matter development and decreased internalizing problems. These findings suggest that catch-up sleep on weekends may serve as a protective strategy against the negative effects of insufficient sleep.
Sleep is an important contributor for neural maturation and emotion regulation during adolescence, with long-term effects on a range of white matter tracts implicated in affective processing in at-risk populations. We investigated the effects of adolescent sleep patterns on longitudinal changes in white matter development and whether this is related to the emergence of emotional (internalizing) problems. Sleep patterns and internalizing problems were assessed using self-report questionnaires in adolescents recruited in the general population followed up from age 14-19 years (N = 111 White matter structure was measured using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and estimated using fractional anisotropy (FA). We found that longitudinal increases in time in bed (TIB) on weekends and increases in TIB-variability between weekdays to weekend, were associated with an increase in FA in various interhemispheric and cortico-striatal tracts. Extracted FA values from left superior longitudinal fasciculus mediated the relationship between increases in TIB on weekends and a decrease in internalizing problems. These results imply that while insufficient sleep might have potentially harmful effects on long-term white matter development and internalizing problems, longer sleep duration on weekends (catch-up sleep) might be a natural counteractive and protective strategy.

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