Sleep Disorders
Sleep disorders can be primary in which
there is a defect in the sleep timing mechanism (sometimes called
sleep architecture) called dyssomnias and by parasomnias which
includes nightmare disorder. Sleep disorders may also arise from
medical conditions, another psychological problem such as anxiety
and/or depression or even induced by substance (Eg. alcohol).
One sleep disorder is a
breathing-related disorder which can be caused by breathing
obstruction or a process that interferes with oxygen exchange during
sleep.
Nightmares can be a feature
of the anxiety disorders, acute stress disorder and posttraumatic
stress disorder. But there is a disorder called Nightmare
Disorder that is one of the sleep disorders.
Nightmare disorder
is a repeated (over nights) series of alarming dreams that lead to
awakenings and full alertness from the individual during the night.
This causes lack of effective sleep and social/ occupational
dysfunction during the day. The most common components of such dreams
are those involving danger to the individual (pursuit, harm, etc) or
involving humiliation or shame. For many such patients, sleep
avoidance leads to further impairment. There are sleep laboratories
which can measure for such occurrences. This can begin in early
childhood, and if unaddressed, persist through adulthood.
Primary insomnia is
one of the dyssomnias and is characterized by difficulty initiating or
maintaining sleep or having nonrestorative sleep in which the
individual feels unrested. This results not only in daytime somnolence
(fatigue) but can impair reasoning, judgment and mood. Additionally,
this can result in appreciable health concerns including blood
pressure changes. And the medications most often given for short term
relief of sleep can complicate matters further since they tend to be
habituating and not particularly effective when used over extended
periods. It is also important to be certain that the primary cause is
not a breathing related disorder, nightmare disorder or problems with
mood disorder.
Primary hypersomnia
is characterized by excessive somnolence (sleepiness) with prolonged
periods of sleep and day time episodes of napping. This can result
from a mood disorder such as major depressive disorder and needs to be
differentiated from narcolepsy. There is always a concern that diet or
medication intake be separated and determined not to be a factor in
the excessive need for sleep. Such increased sleep invariably causes
difficulty in occupational and social interaction since the drive for
sleep exceeds the drive for achievement or interpersonal contact.
Sleep centers ask for journals and perform polysomnography to measure
the nature (architecture) and time periods of sleep.
Narcoloepsy
is defined when there have been at least three months of sudden onset
and irresistible sleep which can be characterized by cataplexy (sudden
bilateral loss of muscle tone, most frequently in intensely emotional
situations) and/or sudden sleep paralysis or hallucinations at the
beginning (hypnogogic) or endings (hypnopompic) of sleep cycles. Such
individuals find an irresistible urge for sleep often precipitated by
an emotional event and will report either paralysis or hallucinations
at the onset or closure of sleep. This differs from primary
hypersomnia and often has a neurological basis and is not typically
implicated with clinical depression.
Circadian Rhythm
Sleep Disorder is most often divided into three major
subtypes: a pattern of delayed sleep onset and then late awakening
with inability to bring this into a normal pattern. This is called
delayed sleep phase type. Threre is also jet lag type that which
occurs in individuals who travel frequently across time zones as part
of their work. Shift Work Type refers to individuals who are working
during normal sleep cycle and attempting to force sleep during the
normal waking hours. There is also what is referred to as unspecified
type for sleep wake schedule disorders that arise as a resilt of other
irregular sleep wake patterns.
Sleepwalking
Disorder is diagnosed when an individual arises from bed,
often during the first third of a major sleep episode, and walks
about. The individual, during the episode, has a blank, often
expressionless, face and may be unresponsive to others communicating
although in some instances the sleep walking individual will
verbalize. The individual is awakened with great difficulty and is
amnestic for the event. Although 1-7% of the adult population may have
had a sleepwalking episode, sleep walking disorder is less common.
Investigations indicate that from 1/10 to 1/3 of children have had a
sleepwalking episode. There has been some indication that breathing
related sleep disorders and sleepwalking and between migraine
headaches and sleepwalking.
Sleep Terror
Disorder presents as someone awakening with signs of fear and
shortness of breath, rapid heat beat and most often a scream of
terror. Recall of the dream is not common with children although
adolescents and adults may recall the dream content and this most
often occurs in the first third of a sleep cycle. In adults this may
be associated with other psychological problems, but in children,
other problems are not as common. In children it usually subsides by
adolescence. In adults, it most often occurs in early adulthood and is
more likely to be chronic. It is also common for this to occur in
families. These individuals are more likely to awaken/calm with
difficulty in comparison to those with Nightmare Disorder who most
often are easier to calm.
The first concern would be
to insure that other problems are not the cause of these symptoms such
as other disease or metabolic problem. Evaluation by the child's
pediatrician and psychologist would be the place to start.
Imsomnia or
Hypersomnia related to Another Mental Disorder - Insomnia
(inability to sleep) and hypersomnia (need for excessive sleep)
associated with psychological problems such as major depressive
disorder can account for almost half of the cases seen in sleep
centers. Biploar disorder, anxiety disorders, panic disorder and other
conditions can create problems with problems with sleep onset, sleep
maintenance or the above mentioned hypersomnia. Such individuals may
appear haggard during the day. Among many groups, it is more
acceptable to discuss problems with sleep than problems with anxiety
and mood.
Sleep Disorders
Arising from Gneral Medical Condition - Insomnia (inability
to sleep) and hypersomnia (need for excessive sleep) and parasomnia
(abnormal behavior during sleep cycles) can allarise from physical
disorders and conditions. There are degenerative neurological
disorders such as Parkinson's Disease, cerebral vascular disease
caused by lesions to the upper brain stem, thyroid conditions, viral
or bacterial infections, pulmonary diseases and muculoskeletal
diseases which result in pain.
In any disease or illness
state, the patient and the doctor need to look at both the
psychological precursors and aftermath of the physical illness upon
the individual as well as the impact of the illness itself upon
physical functioning including sleep.
Substance Induced
Sleep Disorder - as noted insomnia (inability to sleep) and
hypersomnia (need for excessive sleep) and parasomnia (abnormal
behavior during sleep cycles) can arise from prescrived medication or
other drug taken and can result from the intoxication of the drug or
from the withdrawal from the drug. These are not primary sleep
disorders in that they would not occur if the individual were not
taking the prescribed medication or other drug. The drugs used to
treat anxiety (anxiolytic drugs) such as the benzodiazepines (Eg.
Valium, Ativan, etc) and drugs that are used to treat pain (the
narcotic analgesia like Percocet, Vicodin, Lorcet, etc) are know to
disrupt sleep. And since withdrawal can extend over a long period of
time, the sleep disorder may occur weeks after the cessation of the
drug.