scholarly journals P157 Modelling the developmental trajectory of infant and child sleep

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A72-A73
Author(s):  
L Webb ◽  
A Phillips ◽  
J Roberts

Abstract Introduction Sleep is important for infant and child neurodevelopment, yet there is a lack of mechanistic understanding of what drives the changes in sleep over the early years of life. While sleep in the adult brain has been studied and modelled extensively, very little has been done in infants and children, mainly limited to descriptive studies of sleep behaviour. Methods We adapted an existing, physiologically based model of adult sleep to study infant and child sleep behaviour. We compared modelled sleep behaviour to published data on sleep characteristics over a range of ages, both cross sectional from 0 to 5 years and densely-sampled individual data in the first year of life. We performed Bayesian inference to estimate the likely physiological parameters underpinning population-level diversity in sleep characteristics as a function of age from 0 to 5 years. We also fitted the model to individual sleep architecture in the first year of life. Results The empirically observed decrease in total sleep duration and consolidation of sleep bouts with increasing age are well explained by decreases in the constant inhibitory input to the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus and increases in the characteristic somnogen clearance time during sleep. Further, our model produced realistic sleep-wake dynamics consistent with early maturation of sleep in the heavily sampled, single infant data. Discussion Our results show that a greater understanding of the neurophysiology of sleep in infants and children can be achieved through the use of physiologically based models.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 473-479
Author(s):  
Richard B. Johnston ◽  
Sarah H. Sell

Four thousand twenty-one consecutive blood cultures obtained from infants and children during the period 1956 through 1962 were analyzed. Two hundred eighty-four (7.1%) of these were positive, representing 198 patients with clinical evidence of septicemia. The over-all mortality rate was 30%. Approximately one-fourth of the patients were newborn babies, with 38% mortality rate; while another one-fourth were children with a chronic underlying disease, with 53% mortality rate. Of the microorganisms identified in the blood cultures, staphylococci, the enteric bacteria, D. pneumoniae and H. influenzae were found in greatest numbers. In children with chronic disease, the enteric bacteria (63% mortality rate) and staphylococci (70% mortality rate) were most common. In previously well children, D. pneumoniae (17% mortality rate), H. influenzae (9% mortality rate) and staphylococci (17% mortality rate) were the most frequent. During the first year of life, staphylococci —coagulase-negative as well as coagulasepositive strains—and the enteric bacteria dominated the neonatal period, while D. pneumoniae and H. influenzae were most prominent after the first month. The over-all mortality rate of patients with septicemia rose significantly over the 7 years of this study. The reasons for this are discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Przemysław Tomalski

Abstract Apart from their remarkable phonological skills young infants prior to their first birthday show ability to match the mouth articulation they see with the speech sounds they hear. They are able to detect the audiovisual conflict of speech and to selectively attend to articulating mouth depending on audiovisual congruency. Early audiovisual speech processing is an important aspect of language development, related not only to phonological knowledge, but also to language production during subsequent years. Th is article reviews recent experimental work delineating the complex developmental trajectory of audiovisual mismatch detection. Th e central issue is the role of age-related changes in visual scanning of audiovisual speech and the corresponding changes in neural signatures of audiovisual speech processing in the second half of the first year of life. Th is phenomenon is discussed in the context of recent theories of perceptual development and existing data on the neural organisation of the infant ‘social brain’.


2014 ◽  
Vol 233 (2) ◽  
pp. 641-647 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annika M. D. Melinder ◽  
Carolien Konijnenberg ◽  
Tone Hermansen ◽  
Moritz M. Daum ◽  
Gustaf Gredebäck

2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Markant ◽  
Lisa S. Scott

Face-processing abilities are biased such that some faces are differentiated, recognized, and identified more readily than others. Across the first year of life, experience with faces shapes the development of face-processing biases. However, the developmental trajectory of face processing and important contributing factors are not well understood. In order to better characterize the development of face processing during infancy, we propose a model involving repeated interactions between attention and perceptual learning. This interactive framework predicts that bottom-up attention orienting to faces leads to rapid perceptual learning about frequently experienced faces, top-down selective-attention biases for familiar faces, and increasingly refined neural representations across the first year of life.


1986 ◽  
Vol 95 (6_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seymour R. Cohen ◽  
Jerome W. Thompson

Lymphangiomas are uncommon benign congenital lymphatic tumors of childhood. They are found in all parts of the body structure, but rarely occur in the larynx. This paper reviews charts of 160 patients with cystic hygroma (lymphangiomata) of whom ten had extensive involvement of the larynx. A benign but nevertheless challenging tumor, its treatment demands the patience and skill of the surgeon. The lesion is more common in the white patient, and 40% appear in the newborn. Fifty percent present by the end of the first year of life, and 75% by the end of the second. The onset is uncommon in the older child and a rare occurrence in the adult. The treatment of lymphangiomata is surgical excision, and is more difficult when in the larynx. Laser surgery has been most helpful when the lesion is in the laryngeal complex. Considering the extreme difficulties which lymphangioma present to the child and to the physician, the ultimate results of all forms of conservative surgical therapy can be rewarding. Excessive or radical surgery will not necessarily guarantee complete elimination of disease and may be harmful.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1954 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-10
Author(s):  
DONALD B. CHEEK

The distribution of bromide has been used to measure total body chloride in 50 infants and children. Total chloride has been found to follow the differential growth equation. An index of extracellular water has been obtained and followed with the progress of age. It has been found that infants in early life have 40% more chloride per unit weight than adults. Total chloride/kg. shows a rapid proportionate decrease during the first year of life.


2015 ◽  
pp. 48-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Hinde ◽  
Victoria Fairhurst

This paper re-examines the high rates of infant mortality observed in rural areas of eastern England in the early years of civil registration. Infant mortality rates in some rural registration districts in the East Riding of Yorkshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk were higher than those in the mill towns of Lancashire. After describing the areas affected, this paper considers three potential explanations: environmental factors, poor-quality child care associated with the employment of women in agriculture, and the possibility that the high rates were the artefactual consequence of migrant women workers bringing their children to these areas. These explanations are then assessed using a range of evidence. In the absence of reliable cause of death data, recourse is had to three alternative approaches. The first involves the use of the exceptionally detailed tabulations of ages at death within the first year of life provided in the Registrar General's Annual Reports for the 1840s to assess whether the 'excess' infant deaths in rural areas of eastern England happened in the immediate post-natal period or later in the first year of life. Second, data on the seasonality of mortality in the 1840s are examined to see whether the zone of 'excess' infant mortality manifested a distinctive seasonal pattern. Finally, a regression approach is employed involving the addition of covariates to regression models. The conclusion is that no single factor was responsible for the 'excess' infant mortality, but a plausible account can be constructed which blends elements of all three of the potential explanations mentioned above with the specific historical context of these areas of eastern England.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 369-369

The author found the literature to be backing in precise statements concerning the extent to which the liver and spleen project below the costal margin in infants and children. It was found that when measured at the end of exploration, the mean projection of the liver edge below the costal margin in the midclavicular line was approximately 2 cm in the newborn, 1.6 cm in the premature, 1.6 cm during the remainder of the first year, 1 cm from 1½ to 10½ years of age and 0.85 cm from 10½ to 16½ years. The spleen could be palpated in 13.5% of newborn infants, in 12.7% during the remainder of the first year, and in 7.2% of those 1½ to 10½ years of age.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 102 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 258-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norman S. Talner

The New England Regional Infant Cardiac Program (NERICP) is a voluntary association of all hospitals in the New England states which offer definitive care for infants with heart disease. With the purpose of improving infant cardiac care, the program began in 1968 and continues to the present. Specific activities include professional education to improve case finding and earlier referral; identification and subsidy of appropriate transportation facilities; improved communication with participating hospitals; subsidy of follow-up where needed; provision for room and board for indigent parents when their baby has been moved some distance from home; and continuing nursery nurse education in the recognition of infants with heart disease. All participating hospitals agree to tabulation of their entire experience with infants with heart disease (3626 infants in 9 years). Case histories of surviving infants have been updated systematically. The period of July 1968 to June 1974 was selected for this detailed analysis because data from this period form the basis of an ongoing long-term follow-up study and have been reverified several times. This analysis is continued to the first year of life. More recent data, July 1974 to June 1977, are discussed separately and italicized numerical data from 1974 to 1977 have been added to tables where the results may be of interest. In the early years, case finding rose by 20% and has continued to increase gradually. By 1976, there were 2.4 NERICP infants per 1000 live births identifiable in the New England states. Surveys of state vital statistics showed a 50% decrease in infants who died with heart disease who did not reach a participating hospital. Neonates are admitted to participating hospitals earlier; admissions of infants less than 2 days old increased from 20% to 34% in 1977. Of infants admitted in 1977, more than 50% were in the first week of life. During the period of study from 1969 to 1974, there was a consolidation of hospital services for infants with heart disease. Of the initial 11 participating hospitals in 1969, by 1974, there were 5 hospitals offering a full range of cardiac services, 3 hospitals offering limited surgical services, 2 hospitals no longer performing cardiac catheterizations or cardiac surgery in infants, and 1 hospital that had discontinued all pediatric cardiology. Despite expected differences in case findings, the patient material and management of patients among the various hospitals were surprisingly comparable. There was little variation in the kinds of heart disease encountered over the years, among the states, and among the hospitals. There was a significantly higher mortality among infants whose birth weight was less than 2.0 kg and among infants who had additional, severe noncardiac anomalies. Mortality was significantly higher for infants admitted in the first days or weeks of life and cardiac surgery resulted in higher mortalities in this age group. Among the many specific anatomic diagnostic categories, there was little change in outcome during the years 1969 to 1974. Subsequently, immediate and 30-day survival from surgical procedures showed improvement whether viewed by age at surgery, diagnosis, operative procedure, or years. The introduction of early reparative surgery, as opposed to early palliative surgery followed by late repair, occurred in 1973. Subsequent data showed an increasing number of “open heart” procedures in infants with steadily improving 30-day mortality. A similar fall in mortality for closed heart procedures was documented. Results of palliation versus repair for ventricular septal defects, transposition of the great arteries, and tetralogy of Fallot were investigated. The average number of days of hospitalization, the number of cardiac catheterizations, and the numbers of cardiac operations were evaluated. By using hospital charges for 1975, the estimated cost for care of an average cardiac infant for the first year of life ranged from $3800 to $7200 (average $6699). Among the hospitals, the payments by state agencies for hospital costs in the first year of life were estimated to range from $4300 to $8000 per patient for the same year. Because NERICP can provide detailed data on a consecutive series of infants from a finite geographic area, epidemiologic information can be gleaned (Am J Epidemiol 1976; 104:527, Am J Epidemiol 1979; 109:433). Similarly, detailed experience with the various anatomic cardiac lesions was extracted and presented as a guideline for expected average experience for regions outside of New England.


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