“…In our study, some children also scored outside the normal range of the SNAKE, which may tend to indicate abnormal sleep behavior and fits with the numerous existing studies, which ascribed sleep disturbances to children with CP [ 17 , 21 , 25 , 54 , 57 , 58 ]. Nevertheless, as the greatest limitation of the study, it must be stressed at this point that the SNAKE defines no cut-off values that determine at what point a child’s sleep behavior is clinically relevant and thus potentially requiring special attention or treatment [ 37 , 45 ]. In order for the SNAKE to be fully applicable to complex samples, such as the one studied, and also to have relevance as a diagnostic tool for everyday clinical practice, the definition of cut-off values, for example, as part of a revision of the SNAKE, should definitely be sought.…”