Causes, incidence, and risk factors: More than 100 different disorders of sleeping and waking have been identified. They can be grouped in four main categories:
1.Problems with falling and staying asleep (insomnia)
2.Problems with staying awake (excessive daytime sleepiness)
3.Problems with sticking to a regular sleep schedule (sleep rhythm problem)
4.Unusual behavoirs during sleep (sleep-disruptive behaviors)
PROBLEMS WITH FALLING AND STAYING ASLEEP: Insomnia includes any combination of difficulty with falling asleep, staying asleep, intermittent wakefulness and early-morning awakening. Episodes may come and go (be transient), last as long as 2 to 3 weeks (be short-term), or be long-lasting (chronic).
Common factors associated with insomnia include:
- Physical illness
- Depression
- Anxiety or stress
- Poor sleeping environment such as excessive noise or light
- Caffeine
- Alcohol or other drugs
- Use of certain medications
- Heavy smoking
- Physical discomfort
- Daytime napping
- Counterproductive sleep habits:
- Early bedtimes
- Excessive time spent awake in bed
Disorders include:
- Psychophysiological insomnia: a condition in which stress caused by the insomnia makes it even harder to fall asleep
- Delayed sleep phase syndrome: your internal clock is constantly out of synch with the "accepted" day / night phases; for example, patients feel best if they can sleep from 4AM to noon
- Hypnotic-dependent sleep disorder: insomnia that occurs when you stop or become tolerant to certain types of sleep medications
- Stimulant-dependent sleep disorder: insomnia that occurs when you stop or become dependent on certain types of stimulants
Disorders of excessive sleepiness are called hypersomnias. These include:
- Idiopathic hypersomnia (excessive sleepiness that occurs without an identifiable cause)
- Narcolepsy
- Obstructive and central sleep apnea
- Periodic limb movement disorder
- Restless leg syndrome
Problems may also occur when you do not maintain a consistent sleep and wake schedule. This occurs when traveling between times zones and with shift workers on rotating schedules, particularly nighttime workers.
Sleep disruption disorders include:
- Irregular sleep-wake syndrome
- Jet lag syndrome
- Natural short sleeper (the person sleeps less hours than normal but has no ill effects)
- Paradoxical insomnia (the person actually sleeps a different amount than they think they do)
- Shift work sleep disorder
Abnormal behaviors during sleep are called parasomnias and are fairly common in children. They include:
- Sleep terrors
- Sleep walking
- REM sleep-behavior disorder (a type of psychosis in which a person"acts out" dreams so violently that they may injure the person sleeping with them)
No comments:
Post a Comment