If you think you’ve got it
bad because your bed partner snores, think again.
- Night terrors: momentary, frightening hallucinations, resulting in panic and
confusion. Night terrors are common
among children. Most children grow out of them, though some can progress to
more violent forms of this behavior in adolescence.
- R.E.M. Sleep Behavior Disorder (R.B.D.): this is characterized by vivid dreams that
portray threatening persons or objects. Mild instances result in restlessness
and abnormal twitching in bed; more serious are occasions when people, in acting out their dreams, attempt to
fight back against their imaginary foe, thereby raising the risk of serious
injury.
For centuries, high-profile cases have involved sleep violence. If you strangle your wife to death in your sleep, should you be held 100 percent accountable? This has been a tricky subject for legal scholars.
Are there any risk factors?
Certainly. Most patients with
R.B.D. are males over 50 years of age.
Interestingly, scientists have discovered that people with R.B.D. develop
lesions on a small portion of their brain stem that ordinarily inhibits
physical movement during R.E.M. sleep. So while most people are “paralyzed” during
sleep, people with R.B.D. are not, and can sleepwalk
and do things with their bodies that you’d normally equate with being wide
awake and fully conscious.
Other risk factors include:
- sleep
deprivation
- stress
- alcohol
consumption
The good news is we have a
collection of drugs at our disposal to help people with serious R.B.D., which
people in previous centuries did not (though they would lock people up and
force them to sleep alone). Therapy can also work for some people.
The phenomenon has been the
subject of a television movie. After Kenneth Parks, an unemployed Canadian, murdered his
mother-in-law in 1987, Hilary Swank filled the role of playing his wife in “The Sleepwalker Killing”
(1997). Having no motive for the crime and a history of sleepwalking, Parks was
acquitted by an Ontario jury. In another case in Scottsdale AZ, the man was
found guilty.
If you or someone you know is prone to violent acts in their
sleep, they should immediately see a sleep specialist to get help – this is a
treatable disorder.
Sweet Dreams,
Michael J. Breus, PhD
The Sleep Doctor™
www.thesleepdoctor.com
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/thesleepdoctor
Click here to order Dr. Breus's book, Beauty Sleep, on Amazon or Kindle, or here to buy it for the Barnes & Noble Nook.





Hi all – I just wanted to let you know about a study currently enrolling people with a past head injury. The study is assessing how well a new medicine works for people who feel sleepy during the day as a result of their head injury or concussion. Check it out here: www.HeadSleepStudy.org
Posted by: alicia | April 12, 2010 at 10:14 AM
Dr Breus,
Very informative article. Does being a veteran come into play with this disorder, or say someone with PTSD?
Trap
Posted by: Trapper Sherwood | April 10, 2010 at 05:41 AM