2004
DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-835064
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Parasomnias

Abstract: Parasomnias are defined as unpleasant or undesirable behavioral or experiential phenomena that occur predominately or exclusively during the sleep period. Initially thought to represent a unitary phenomenon, often attributed to psychiatric disease, it is now clear that parasomnias are not a unitary phenomenon but rather are the manifestation of a wide variety of completely different conditions, most of which are diagnosable and treatable. The parasomnias may be conveniently categorized as "primary sleep paraso… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 85 publications
(94 reference statements)
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“…Parasomnias are unpleasant or undesirable behavioural or experiential phenomena which occur predominantly or exclusively during sleep [1]. They occur during REM sleep, any of the four stages of non-REM sleep, and during transitions between sleep and wakefulness [2,3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parasomnias are unpleasant or undesirable behavioural or experiential phenomena which occur predominantly or exclusively during sleep [1]. They occur during REM sleep, any of the four stages of non-REM sleep, and during transitions between sleep and wakefulness [2,3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Benzodiazepine is often an effective treatment for arousal disorders: low-dose clonazepam, starting with 0.25 mg an hour before bedtime, increasing slowly with attention to daytime sedation. Generally 3-6 weeks of treatment may be curative for a long time [31]. However, in children the use of psychotropic drugs is generally not recommended because: a) they are thought to mask the symptoms rather than to treat the causes of partial arousals; b) the drug-induced decrease in slow-wave sleep might have detrimental effects; c) tolerance and rebound effects occur frequently and cause severe increase in partial arousals.…”
Section: ■ Management and Therapymentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Parasomnias occur mainly in childhood because of the different sleep structure with an increase of SWS pressure in earlier ages [31]. For the same reason, sleep deprivation followed by a SWS rebound can precipitate episodes.…”
Section: ■ Pathophysiologymentioning
confidence: 99%
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