Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Sleep & Dyslexia: Reading Between the Lines

A new study from Italy analyzed the sleep of 16 children with developmental dyslexia. The results were published in the Oct. 1 issue of the journal Sleep.

The children had an average age of 11 years. Their sleep was evaluated during an
overnight sleep study in a sleep lab. Results were compared with 11 children who read normally.

The study found that dyslexic children had a higher percentage of light, stage 2 sleep; they had a lower percentage of deep, slow wave sleep. These stages occur during non-rapid eye movement sleep – or NREM sleep. Children with dyslexia also had fewer periods of REM sleep.

Further analysis found additional differences during stage 2 sleep. Children with dyslexia had an increase in the power of fast, “sigma” brain waves; they also had an increased “sleep spindle” density. There were positive correlations between these measures and the children’s performance on reading tests.

A sleep spindle is a brief burst of rhythmic brain activity; it is a unique aspect of stage 2 sleep. “Density” refers to the number of sleep spindles that occur per minute of stage 2 sleep.

Dyslexic children had an average of 6.2 sleep spindles per minute; normal readers had only 3.5 sleep spindles per minute.

The NINDS
reports that dyslexia is a brain-based type of learning disability; it involves a reading impairment that occurs in a person who has normal intelligence.

The authors suggest that increases in sleep spindles and sigma power may be markers of dyslexia; these markers may be related to the severity of reading impairment. The results also support the hypothesis that sleep plays an important role in learning and memory.

The authors note that only one other study has measured brain activity during sleep in children with reading disabilities; the
results were published in the journal Sleep in 1993. That study found similar changes in the sleep of reading-disabled boys.

Learn more about sleep stages on SleepEducation.com.

Image by Shanubi

4 comments:

  1. Has there ever been any research on methods to change a person's type of sleep stages? For example, might sleep therapy designed for dyslexics ever result in changes in better memory by promoting more beneficial sleep?

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  2. THANK YOU for posting this! I was wondering why my severely dyslexic 11-year-old son needs 12 - 13 hours of sleep each night.

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  3. Now I know why I do better when I sleep 10 hours. Reading is exhausting.

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  4. Ah! Thank you. My son struggles to 'wind down' at bedtime, regardless of the routine in place. He wakes tired after 10-12 hrs sleep. This explains a lot

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