The struggle to get your child to go to sleep and stay asleep is something most parents can relate to. Once the bedtime battle is over and the kids have finally nodded off, many parents tune out as well.
But University of South Australia researcher Professor Kurt Lushington is calling for parents to check on their small snoozers before switching off.
He says knowing the quality of a child’s sleep is important, as it could be an indicator of sleep-disordered breathing—an under-reported medical condition that can affect a child’s health and wellbeing.
“During sleep, the muscles keeping the upper airway stiff relax, and as a consequence, the airway narrows, which can cause snoring, snorting or in severe cases, the complete obstruction of the airway,” Prof Lushington says.
“This is known as sleep-disordered breathing, which can lead to a number of problems for children including daytime sleepiness, fatigue, irritability, hyperactivity and poor attention—and potentially worsens school performance.
“The long-term effects are not well understood but research suggests sleep-disordered breathing could also impair cardiovascular and metabolic health.
“Sleep-disordered breathing is significantly undiagnosed in the community. Parents can play an important role in the diagnostic process by looking out for the common symptoms, which include heavy breathing, snoring, gasping, or snorting, and stopping breathing altogether—and then share that information with their child’s doctor.”
In a new study of 1639 children in South Australia, Prof Lushington and colleagues surveyed parents to gauge whether they saw sleep-disordered breathing symptoms as a sleep problem. The findings suggest many parents do hold concerns about their children’s sleeping habits, but it doesn’t translate to them seeking medical help.
Almost all parents of children with sleep-disordered symptoms viewed apnoea as a problem while nearly two-thirds saw snorting, gasping, and being fearful their child would stop breathing as a problem.
Roughly half of parents considered snoring a problem and only one third viewed breathing heavily but not snoring as an issue.
Prof Lushington says the results are surprising given that most parents don’t bring up these concerns with their child’s medical professionals.
“Parents don’t tend to discuss their child’s sleep difficulties at medical consultations—in Australia, it’s estimated only four percent of parents will bring this up with their doctor,” he says.
“The good news from our study is that we found that many parents are already recognizing that there is a sleep problem. Prior to this, we had hypothesized that the under-reporting of symptoms suggestive of sleep-disordered breathing, or of sleep problems in general, at medical consultation could be because of the lack of parents’ awareness of a problem existing.
“While there does need to be more education for parents on symptoms of sleep-disordered breathing—particularly around snoring or heavy breathing being a potential cause for concern, there are clearly other barriers to parents bringing up sleep problems in medical consultations.
“To address this, we suggest medical practitioners need to purposely include questions about sleep at consultations to prompt parents to discuss any symptoms they may have observed in their children at night.
“If parents check in to see how well their children are sleeping at night and doctors routinely check in with parents to discuss children’s sleeping habits, we might be able to catch sleep-disordered breathing earlier and take steps to treat it before it affects a child’s behavior and health.”
The current treatment for sleep-disordered breathing in children is adenotonsillectomy—the removal of adenoid and tonsils—which is known to improve children’s quality of life and sleep.
The research was published in the paper ‘Sleep disordered breathing in children: which symptoms do parents consider a problem?’ in Sleep Medicine.
Your child’s sleep—tips for checking in:
Familiarize yourself with guidelines advising how much sleep children need at different ages to function well during the day.
- If your child is getting enough sleep according to the guidelines but experiences daytime problems with sleepiness, fatigue, irritability, hyperactivity, or poor attention, this could be a sign of sleep-disordered breathing.
- If you notice your child snores, struggles to breath at night, has long pauses between breaths greater than 20 seconds, or gasps at night—it’s time to bring up the symptoms with your child’s GP or pediatrician.
- University of South Australia