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Kids Have Sleep Problems, Too
Pediatric
sleep specialist Richard Kravitz, MD, remembers the days when the television
turned to static at 2 a.m. "It used to be that
people went to bed after the sun went down," he says. Now, like the adults who
are raising them, many kids are chronically sleep-deprived. But this condition
in children can look much different than the shuffling, bleary-eyed yawning
seen in overtired adults. Some kids, when they’re too
tired, actually become hyperactive.Kravitz says that
inadequate sleep is as big an issue as disturbed sleep among his young
patients. "I'm getting more and
more referrals for kids who are having serious problems in school or elsewhere,
and it turns out that they are simply chronically tired," he says. "Many parents don’t
understand how much sleep their children need. Teenagers need nine or more
hours a night, and young children need even more. "If a child is
sleeping six or seven hours a night, that’s just not enough.”
Kravitz also gets a lot of
referrals at the end of summer break -- because after a season of family
vacations and shared hotel rooms, some parents discover that their kids are not
the restful sleepers they may previously have seemed. "About 7 to 10 percent
of children snore," Kravitz says. While snoring on its own
was once considered a benign condition in children, it’s now a flag for further
investigation. "If they snore, you
gotta ask more," he says.
This is because snoring can
be a signal of obstructive sleep apnea, which affects 2 to 4 percent of all
children. Kravitz notes that the
number-one cause of apnea in children is not obesity, but rather structural
problems in the airway. "It’s mostly big
tonsils and adenoids," he says, "though obesity has shot up as a
cause."
Since children with sleep
apnea generally don’t suffer from problems such as hypertension and heart
disease, the effect of sleep apnea on these illnesses isn’t as great a concern
as it is in adults. What is often an immediate
complication is attention deficit disorder (ADD), a diagnosis that many
children with sleep apnea also carry. "In my opinion, before
a child is put on Ritalin, that child should also be evaluated for sleep
apnea," says Kravitz. "Treating the apnea may obviate the need for
medication."
Above all, it’s important
to remember that children with sleeping problems are not miniature adults with
sleeping problems, Kravitz says. "Kids can present in
ways that are a lot more subtle, so you need to cast a wider net."
The pediatric sleep lab at
Duke conducts sleep studies seven days a week. For more information, call
919-684-3364.




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