Results 161 to 170 of about 9,938 (219)
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Sleep Medicine, 2010
Studies on families with sleepwalking are uncommonly published but can give further information on the phenotype of patients with chronic sleepwalking.Out of 51 individuals referred for chronic sleepwalking during a 5-year period, we obtained sufficient information on 7 families with direct relatives who reported sleepwalking with or without sleep ...
Michelle T Cao
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Studies on families with sleepwalking are uncommonly published but can give further information on the phenotype of patients with chronic sleepwalking.Out of 51 individuals referred for chronic sleepwalking during a 5-year period, we obtained sufficient information on 7 families with direct relatives who reported sleepwalking with or without sleep ...
Michelle T Cao
exaly +3 more sources
Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy, 2004
Somnambulism is an arousal parasomnia consisting of a series of complex behaviours that result in large movements in bed or walking during sleep. It occurs in 2-14% of children and 1.6-2.4% of adults. Occasional benign episodes are managed conservatively.
Agnes, Remulla, Christian, Guilleminault
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Somnambulism is an arousal parasomnia consisting of a series of complex behaviours that result in large movements in bed or walking during sleep. It occurs in 2-14% of children and 1.6-2.4% of adults. Occasional benign episodes are managed conservatively.
Agnes, Remulla, Christian, Guilleminault
openaire +2 more sources
Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2016
Sleepwalking (SW) is a parasomnia, an abnormal behavior occurring during sleep. SW is a non-REM sleep parasomnia, an arousal disorder, like sleep terrors and confusional arousals. SW results from an incomplete arousal from slow-wave sleep, some regions of the cerebral cortex being awake and allowing movement and vision for example and others being ...
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Sleepwalking (SW) is a parasomnia, an abnormal behavior occurring during sleep. SW is a non-REM sleep parasomnia, an arousal disorder, like sleep terrors and confusional arousals. SW results from an incomplete arousal from slow-wave sleep, some regions of the cerebral cortex being awake and allowing movement and vision for example and others being ...
openaire +2 more sources
American family physician, 1995
Sleepwalking is one of the parasomnias, a group of disorders that also includes night terrors, nocturnal enuresis and nightmares. This disorder of arousal is much more common in children than in adults, and it is commonly associated with other parasomnias.
P, Masand, A P, Popli, J B, Weilburg
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Sleepwalking is one of the parasomnias, a group of disorders that also includes night terrors, nocturnal enuresis and nightmares. This disorder of arousal is much more common in children than in adults, and it is commonly associated with other parasomnias.
P, Masand, A P, Popli, J B, Weilburg
openaire +1 more source
Sleepwalking and recurrent sleeptalking in children of childhood sleepwalkers
American Journal of Psychiatry, 1984Thirty-seven children, one or both of whose parents had sleepwalked during childhood, were studied prospectively. At 8 years of age, they were more likely to manifest sleepwalking, recurrent sleeptalking , and emotional lability than control children.
K, Abe, M, Amatomi, N, Oda
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Why has sleepwalking research been “sleepwalking”?
Neurology, 2008Do we really need any new research on sleepwalking? After all, it seems to be common knowledge that sleepwalkers are acting out dreams and that these dreams are due to deeply suppressed anxieties or psychic trauma. The image of the sleepwalker moving slowly with hands outstretched—occasionally with knife in hand—can be found in literature and media ...
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