Results 251 to 260 of about 1,343,714 (312)
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SLEEP

Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 1983
As for sleep, the patient ought to follow the natural custom of being awake during the day and asleep during the night. Should this be changed it is rather a bad sign. Least harm will result if the patient sleeps from early morning for a third part of the day. Sleep after this time is rather bad. The worst thing is not to sleep either during the day or
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Sleep on it

Science, 2017
Evidence of sleep-induced weakening of synapses lends support for a controversial ...
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Sleep and sleep disorders in pregnancy

2020
Pregnancy is associated with a number of physiologic changes in the body including hormonal, anatomical, and mechanical. These changes alter many physiologic functions including sleep. The literature suggests that a number of women develop changes in duration, pattern, and quality of sleep during pregnancy.
Ravi, Gupta, Vikram Singh, Rawat
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Sleep on It!

Scientific American Mind, 2018
The article focuses on research into the physiology of sleep. It mentions a research study by Carol Everson in 1989 which found rats totally deprived of sleep died within a month, and comments on the need for rapid eye movement sleep. It comments on intractable insomnia which is caused by inherited prions that damaged regions in the thalamus and ...
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Neuroimaging of sleep and sleep disorders

Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2006
Herein are presented the results of research in the area of sleep neuroimaging over the past year. Significant work has been performed to clarify the basic mechanisms of sleep in humans. New studies also extend prior observations regarding altered brain activation in response to sleep deprivation by adding information regarding vulnerability to sleep ...
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Sleep and epilepsy

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2000
AbstractThe neurophysiology of the brain is complicated and nuanced. It is responsible for the normal sleep/wake states that every person experiences, and for the changes in brain neurophysiology that result in epileptic seizures and in disorders of sleep. It is therefore not surprising that sleep, sleep disorders, and epilepsy interact on many levels.
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To Sleep or Not To Sleep

Journal of Bronchology & Interventional Pulmonology, 2015
Joseph, Cicenia, Charanjit S, Bahniwal
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To Sleep or Not to Sleep: That Remains the Question

Pediatrics, 2004
In this issue, Gilbert et al1 have provided some new insights into the utility of sleep deprivation before recording of electroencephalograms (EEGs), to increase the likelihood of identification of interictal epileptiform discharges. A design flaw, which makes the results less universally applicable, is that the subjects and referring physicians both ...
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Sleep, sleep apnea, and epilepsy

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2004
Sleep disorders occur commonly in patients with epilepsy, and can be responsible for symptoms of daytime somnolence and also can contribute to the intractability of epilepsy. The most important aspect of treating sleep disorders, especially sleep apnea, is the recognition of the problem.
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