Sleep duration and efficiency moderate the effects of prenatal and childhood ambient pollutant exposure on global white matter microstructural integrity in adolescence
Cotter, D. L.; Kiss, O.; Ahmadi, H.; de Jesus, A.; Schwartz, J.; Baker, F. C.; Hackman, D.; Herting, M. M.
Show abstract
BackgroundAir pollution is a ubiquitous neurotoxicant associated with alterations in structural connectivity. Good habitual sleep may be an important protective lifestyle factor due to its involvement in the brain waste clearance and its bidirectional relationship with immune function. Wearable multisensory devices may provide more objective measures of sleep quantity and quality. We investigated whether sleep duration and efficiency moderated the relationship between prenatal and childhood pollutant exposure and whole-brain white matter microstructural integrity at ages 10-13 years. MethodsWe used multi-shell diffusion-weighted imaging data collected on 3T MRI scanners and objective sleep data collected with Fitbit Charge 2 from the 2-year follow-up visit for 2178 subjects in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study(R). White matter tracts were identified using a probabilistic atlas. Restriction spectrum imaging was performed to extract restricted normalized isotropic (RNI) and directional (RND) signal fraction parameters for all white matter tracts, then averaged to calculate global measures. Sleep duration was calculated by summing the time spent in each sleep stage; sleep efficiency was calculated by dividing sleep duration by time spent in bed. Using an ensemble-based modeling approach, air pollution concentrations of PM2.5, NO2, and O3 were assigned to each childs residential addresses during the prenatal period (9-month average before birthdate) as well as at ages 9- 10 years. Multi-pollutant linear mixed effects models assessed the associations between global RNI and RND and sleep-by-pollutant interactions, adjusting for appropriate covariates. ResultsSleep duration interacted with childhood NO2 exposure and sleep efficiency interacted with prenatal O3 exposure to affect RND at ages 10-13 years. Longer sleep duration and higher sleep efficiency in the context of higher pollutant exposure was associated with lower RND compared to those with similar pollutant exposure but shorter sleep duration and lower sleep efficiency. ConclusionsLow-level air pollution poses a risk to brain health in youth, and healthy sleep duration and efficiency may increase resilience to its harmful effects on white matter microstructural integrity. Future studies should evaluate the generalizability of these results in more diverse cohorts as well as utilize longitudinal data to understand how sleep may impact brain health trajectories in the context of pollution over time.
Matching journals
The top 10 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.