Objective To propose criteria for diagnosis of the night eating syndrome (NES). Method An international research meeting was held in April 2008, and consensus criteria for NES diagnosis were determined. Results The core criterion is an abnormally increased food intake in the evening and nighttime, manifested by (1) consumption of at least 25% of intake after the evening meal, and/or (2) nocturnal awakenings with ingestions at least twice per week. Awareness of the eating episodes is required, as is distress or impairment in functioning. Three of five modifiers must also be endorsed. These criteria must be met for a minimum duration of 3 months. Discussion These criteria help standardize the definition of NES. Additional aspects of the nosology of NES yet to be fully elaborated include its relationship to other eating and sleep disorders. Assessment and analytic tools are needed to assess these new criteria more accurately.
Parasomnias are abnormal behaviors emanating from or associated with sleep. Sleepwalking and related disorders result from an incomplete dissociation of wakefulness from nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. Conditions that provoke repeated cortical arousals, or promote sleep inertia lead to NREM parasomnias by impairing normal arousal mechanisms. Changes in the cyclic alternating pattern, a biomarker of arousal instability in NREM sleep, are noted in sleepwalking disorders. Sleep-related eating disorder (SRED) is characterized by a disruption of the nocturnal fast with episodes of feeding after an arousal from sleep. SRED is often associated with the use of sedative-hypnotic medications; in particular, the widely prescribed benzodiazepine receptor agonists. Recently, compelling evidence suggests that nocturnal eating may in some cases be a nonmotor manifestation of Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS). rapid eye movement (REM) Sleep Behavior Disorder (RBD) is characterized by a loss of REM paralysis leading to potentially injurious dream enactment. The loss of atonia in RBD often predates the development of Parkinson's disease and other disorders of synuclein pathology. Parasomnia behaviors are related to an activation (in NREM parasomnias) or a disinhibition (in RBD) of central pattern generators (CPGs). Initial management should focus on decreasing the potential for sleep-related injury followed by treating comorbid sleep disorders. Clonazepam and melatonin appear to be effective therapies in RBD, whereas paroxetine has been reported effective in some cases of sleep terrors. At this point, pharmacotherapy for other parasomnias is less certain, and further investigations are necessary.Keywords Parasomnia . Sleepwalking . Sleep terrors . REM sleep behavior disorder . Restless legs syndrome Classification of ParasomniasParasomnias are typically classified by the sleep state from which they arise: non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREM) and rapid eye movement sleep (REM) (see Table 1 NREM parasomnias include: confusional arousals, sleepwalking disorder, and sleep terrors. These behaviors arise when the cortex incompletely arouses from deep NREM sleep, often due to comorbid conditions that provoke repeated arousal or promote sleep inertia. Changes in the cyclic alternating pattern, a biomarker of arousal instability in NREM sleep, are noted in sleepwalking and related disorders [3].Sleep-related eating disorder (SRED) is currently classified in the International Classification of Sleep Disorders, 2nd edition (ICSD-2) under "Other Parasomnia" [1]. However the vast majority of SRED cases emanate from NREM [4], and the complex amnestic behaviors with ambulation are striking similar to sleepwalking [5]. Furthermore, both SRED and sleepwalking are frequently triggered by sedating agents in the setting of underlying motor restlessness [6]. Thus, considering these similarities, SRED will be reviewed immediately after NREM parasomnias.REM sleep behavior disorder is the most clinically relevant REM parasomnia. The loss of atoni...
may contribute to cognitive dysfunction in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD).OBJECTIVE To determine the ability of the antiseizure drug levetiracetam to improve cognition in persons with AD. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTSThe Levetiracetam for Alzheimer's Disease-Associated Network Hyperexcitability (LEV-AD) study was a phase 2a randomized double-blinded placebo-controlled crossover clinical trial of 34 adults with AD that was conducted at the
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