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The Parasomnias

Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2021
Parasomnias usually present in childhood and resolve spontaneously. The diagnosis of non-rapid eye movement-related parasomnias is mainly based on clinical descriptors and can be challenging. Rapid eye movement-related parasomnias may index an underlying psychiatric disorder. Even if benign, parasomnias can affect quality of life.
Oliviero Bruni   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

THE PARASOMNIAS

Lancet, The, 1986
Parasomnias are due to a combination of familial, developmental, and environmental factors. The clinical features are well known, but reports by patients do not always match the typical descriptions. Parasomnias are not due to mental ill-health but are occasionally associated with brain disease.
J D Parkes
exaly   +5 more sources

Parasomnias

Seminars in Neurology, 2004
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 ...
Mark W Mahowald, CARLOS H Schenck
exaly   +3 more sources

Parasomnias in childhood

Sleep Medicine Reviews, 2009
Common childhood parasomnias, including those occurring at sleep onset and during rapid eye movement sleep or non-rapid eye movement sleep and their ontogeny are discussed. The events may be distressing to both the patient and family members. Stereotypic movements characteristic of some parasomnias most likely arise from disinhibition of subcortical ...
Suresh Kotagal
exaly   +3 more sources

Parasomnias and Their Mimics

Neurologic Clinics, 2012
Parasomnias are classified into nonrapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep parasomnias. It is important for the clinician to consider other parasomnia mimics that present to the sleep disorders clinic. These conditions can be differentiated by taking a detailed sleep history and conducting nocturnal polysomnograms to evaluate for potential ...
Raman K Malhotra, Alon Y Avidan
exaly   +3 more sources

Parasomnias

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1987
This article presents four examples of parasomnia activity. Sleepwalking, sleep terror, and rhythmic movement disorder all occur more commonly in children; however, they can persist into adulthood. REM behavior disorder frequently occurs in elderly patients with neurologic lesions. The sleep stage associations of the different disorders differ.
M J, Thorpy, P B, Glovinsky
openaire   +2 more sources

Parasomnias

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2006
Parasomnias are undesirable behaviors that arise from sleep but are not fully under voluntary control. Parasomnias are grouped broadly according to whether they arise from non-rapid eye movement (NREM) or rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. NREM parasomnias are disorders of arousal that occur along a continuum of behavioral, affective, and autonomic ...
David T, Plante, John W, Winkelman
openaire   +2 more sources

Behavioral parasomnias

Current Psychiatry Reports, 2002
Sleep is not a static state. During the sleep period, physiologic changes occur throughout the body and brain. This complex, dynamic process can, at times, result in episodes of unusual or undesirable behaviors. These phenomena are called parasomnias.
Stephen, Brooks, Clete A, Kushida
openaire   +2 more sources

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