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night terror

 
Medical Encyclopedia: Night Terrors

Definition

Night terrors are a sleep disorder characterized by anxiety episodes with extreme panic, often accompanied by screaming, flailing, fast breathing, and sweating and that usually occur within a few hours after going to sleep.

Description

Night terrors occur most commonly in children between the ages of four and 12 but can also occur at all ages. Affected individuals usually suffer these episodes within a few hours after going to sleep. They appear to bolt up suddenly, and wake up screaming, sweating and panicked. The episode may last anywhere from five to 20 minutes. During this time, the individual is actually asleep, although the eyes may open. Quite often, nothing can be done to comfort the affected person. Very often, the person has no memory of the episode upon waking the next day.

Night terrors are differentiated from nightmares in that they have been shown to occur during Stage 4 of sleep, or in REM sleep, while nightmares can occur anytime throughout the sleep cycle.

— Kim Sharp, MLn



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Dictionary: night terror
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n.
A state of intense fear and agitation sometimes experienced, especially by children, on awakening from a stage of sleep not associated with dreaming but characterized by extremely vivid hallucinations.


Definition

Childhood night terrors are a parasomnia, or partial-sleep disorder, common in young children. They occur in the deepest stage of sleep and are characterized by an abrupt arousal, usually within the first hour of sleep. The child may sit bolt upright in acute terror, screaming inconsolably. Night terrors are a confusional arousal resulting from immature sleep patterns with an intense activation of the flight or fight emotion.

Description

Night terrors are not a dream or typical nightmare. They occur in non-REM, slow-wave sleep. The panicked screaming, kicking, thrashing, and flailing is alarming in its intensity. Sleepwalking, another parasomnia disorder, may also occur in as many as one third of children with night terrors. While experiencing the night terror the child is extremely disoriented and may stare straight ahead, eyes wide open, with the dark centers (pupils) enlarged. There is profuse sweating, the heartbeat is rapid, the breathing fast, and the blood pressure is elevated. As the child is not fully awake, she is unable to see or recognize her parent or caretaker and cannot be easily awakened. The night terror may last from one to 15 minutes or more and is usually followed by a return to deep sleep. Afterwards the child may have no memory of the experience.

Night terrors appear to run in families, though there is no scientific evidence of genetic factors. They are a developmental process and not typically a result of mental or physical illness.

Demographics

Childhood night terrors occur more frequently in boys. Children between the ages of three and five years of age are most likely to experience such nocturnal episodes. Such confusional arousals rarely persist beyond childhood, and they are significantly less frequent or cease entirely after age 12.

Causes and Symptoms

Childhood night terrors appear to be a normal physiological process of the immature and developing nervous system. These confusional arousals can be triggered by stressful circumstances such as when a child is overly tired, when there is a loud noise or other unusual disruption, a change in the child's regular sleep-wake schedule, or even a full bladder. Night terrors occurring in adolescence and adult life may be more severe and are often linked with trauma and post-traumatic stress disorders.

When to Call the Doctor

Consult a pediatrician for night terrors if any of the following occur:

  • Episodes occur more than once a week.
  • Episodes persist after a schedule of preventive awakenings.
  • Episodes last more than 45 minutes.
  • The child exhibits drooling, jerking, and stiffening of the body.
  • The child is physically endangered during an episode.
  • Episodes occur later during the sleep cycle, more than two hours after going to sleep.
  • The child has fears that persist throughout the day.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis is based on observation of the following characteristic symptoms:

  • recurring episodes of abrupt and partial awakening from deep sleep with panicked screaming and disorientation
  • increased heart rate, rapid breathing, and profuse sweating during an episode
  • child is unresponsive to efforts to arouse or console during an episode
  • child has little or no memory of the event after a full awakening

Treatment

Parents should not attempt to awaken a child experiencing a night terror. Efforts to console may be futile, though holding the child firmly and speaking with soothing words may facilitate the return to deep sleep. The primary effort should be to protect the child from possible harm to herself and others and ease them back to sleep.

In some severe cases, a pediatrician may prescribe a benzodiazepine tranquilizer, such as diazepam, known to suppress the stage four level of deep sleep. Though tranquilizers may be used for short-term control of night terrors, the result is uncertain and not generally advised.

Alternative Treatment

Hypnosis, biofeedback, and various relaxation techniques have been used with some success to reduce or eliminate occurrence of childhood night terrors. Calming music or bedtime stories can help lull a child into deep sleep. Maintaining a quiet home without sudden disruptive noise will minimize some of the external stimuli that may trigger night terrors.

Nutritional Concerns

Unusually heavy or spicy meals should be avoided before bedtime as indigestion might act as a trigger for night terror arousals.

Prognosis

Childhood night terrors are usually outgrown by the age of seven and rarely persist beyond adolescence.

Prevention

Some pediatricians suggest that parents maintain a sleep diary and observe the child throughout several night terror episodes, noting the amount of time following sleep when the night terror begins. After the sleep-wake pattern is determined, a series of 15–20 minutes prior to the usual occurrence of the night terror and keep the child awake and out of bed for a full five minutes. This may help to break the disruptive sleep pattern that has resulted in the night terrors.

Children often experience night terrors during the toilet-training years. The night terror might be triggered by a full bladder. Assisting the child to the toilet prior to bedtime and even during the course of a night-terror might be beneficial in reducing reoccurrence.

Parental Concerns

Childhood night terrors are alarming to witness. Parents may find it particularly difficult when efforts to console the child fail and the child does not recognize them even though his or her eyes may be wide open. The screaming, flailing, and kicking that accompany a night terror may frighten parents who fear the child is having a seizure. It is not a seizure unless the behavior includes eyes rolling back in the head, stiffening of the body, and drooling. Most childhood night terrors will last about 10 minutes.

Resources

Books

Schroeder, Carolyn S., and Betty N. Gordon. Assessment & Treatment of Childhood Problems, 2nd ed. New York: Guilford Press, 2002.

Organizations

National Sleep Foundation. 1522 K Street, NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20005. Web site: www.livingwithillness.com/id174.htm.

Web Sites

Driver, Helen. "Parasomnias." Canadian Sleep Society. Available online at www.css.to/sleep/disorders/parasomnia.htm (accessed October 12, 2004).

Harvie, Jeni. "Disorders: A Wake-up Call for Parents." Sydney Morning Herald, January 29, 2004. Available online at www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/01/29/10750881124899.html (accessed October 7, 2004).

"Nightmares and Night Terrors." Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. Available online at www.cincinnatichildrens.org/health/info/growth/diagnose/nightmares.htm (accessed October 12, 2004).

"Nightmares and Night Terrors in Children." American Academy of Family Physicians. Available online at (accessed October 12, 2004).

Night Terror Resource Center. Available online at www.nightterrors.org (accessed October 12, 2004).

"Sleep Behavior Problems (Parasomnias)." Kids Health for Parents. Available online at www.kidshealth.org/parent/general/sleep/parasomnia.html (accessed October 12, 2004).

"Sleep Problems in Children." Sleep Matters, March 31, 2004. Available online at www.sleepfoundation.org/features/children_sleep_problems.cfm#nightmares (accessed October 12, 2004).

[Article by: Clare Hanrahan]



Psychoanalysis: Night Terrors
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Night terrors are pathological phenomena that begin around three or four years of age. The child suddenly wakes up at the beginning of the night; he or she is terrified, screams in bed, and seems to be in the grip of hallucinations. When the worried parents arrive, the child does not recognize them and they are unable to calm the child. This state persists for a few minutes, at most, and brings with it neurovegetative manifestations (sweating, tachycardia, and polypnea). Once he or she has calmed down, the child goes back to sleep. The next day the child has no memory of the episode. Night terrors can be recurrent, but in general they disappear around the age of five or six.

There is no reference to night terrors in the works of Sigmund Freud. The phenomenon is difficult to apprehend from a psychoanalytic point of view; because of the amnesia that follows them, night terrors are not accessible, as dreams are, to any secondary revision. This sleep disorder probably reflects a failure in the dreaming function—a weakness in figuration and the binding of affects with mental representations.

We can refer to the work of Didier Houzel, who used electrophysiological observations as the starting point for a physiological explanation for night terrors. They occur during the phases of slow wave sleep (phase IV), outside of the phases of paradoxical sleep in which dreams occur. Phase IV sleep includes physiological aspects that herald the paradoxical sleep phase. Slow wave sleep is a reparatory phase of dream activity; night terrors suggest a blocking of the dream, which cannot begin during this slow sleep phase and, therefore, cannot proceed with the work of psychically binding instinctual energy.

As for the etiology of night terrors, which coincide with the arrival of oedipal conflict, different factors have been identified: libidinal conflicts proper to this period of emotional life, traumatic events, and, finally, disturbances in the child's affective relationships with people close to him or her. The persistence of night terrors beyond the oedipal period is a sign that the child is incapable of elaborating better psychic defenses. They can mark a return to preoedipal positions.

Bibliography

Houzel, Didier. (1980). Rêve et psychopathologie de l'enfant. Neuropsychiatrie de l'Enfance et de l'Adolescence, 28, 155-164.

Sperling, Melitta. (1958). Pavor nocturnus. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 1, 79-94.

—PHILIPPE METELLO

The Dream Encyclopedia: Night Terrors
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Night terrors are episodes in which people typically awaken with a scream and sit bolt upright in bed as if they had just had a nightmare. Unlike in a nightmare, however, the person frequently cannot remember anything except being afraid. Researchers have found that night terrors occur during non-REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, which is sleep characterized by little or no dreaming activity. They most often occur in children, but may also affect adults. Although the precise cause is unknown, the incidence of night terrors among adult individuals prone to have them increases with such factors as stress, lack of sleep, and alcohol and drug use.

This phenomenon has been extensively studied since the1800s. Even though night terrors more often occur in young children, adults are not immune. There are factors common to adults who suffer from night terrors. It is suggested that stress, lack of sleep, and/or the prolific use of drugs or alcohol are factors. However, nothing has been proven conclusively.

In studies of both children and adults, mild to violent nervous bodily reactions occur before the dreamer awakens from a night terror. Heart and respiratory rates double in seconds, and incidents of muscle twitching, violent physical movements, hitting, yelling, walking out of the bedroom and even the house as an attempt to fight off and escape from attackers have all been documented.

Prior studies of night terrors produced some interesting findings. For instance, in 1899, the British Medical Journal published a study of thirty people who suffered from night terrors. Seventeen of the thirty people suffered from the onset of early heart disease. In the 1960s, a group of twenty-three children, all of whom suffered from night terrors, had their adenoids removed. Twenty-two of these children reported an immediate cessation to the terrors. Studies on adults who suffered from night terrors, known to psychologists back in the 1960s as a "disorder of arousal," did not find any correlated personality traits. Persons intimately involved in the personal lives of some of those afflicted with night terrors, however, described them as being "tightly wound" individuals. Current psychology might classify such individuals as having Type A personalities.


Wikipedia: Night terror
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Night terror
Classification and external resources
ICD-10 F51.4
ICD-9 307.46
MeSH D020184
"Pavor Nocturnus" redirects here, for the Sanctuary episode, see Pavor Nocturnus (Sanctuary)

A night terror, also known as a sleep terror or pavor nocturnus, is a parasomnia disorder characterized by extreme terror and a temporary inability to regain full consciousness. The subject wakes abruptly from slow-wave sleep, with waking usually accompanied by gasping, moaning, or screaming. It is often impossible to awaken the person fully, and after the episode the subject normally settles back to sleep without waking. A night terror can rarely be recalled by the subject. They typically occur during non-rapid eye movement sleep.

Contents

In children

Children from age two to six are most prone to night terrors, and they affect about fifteen percent of all children,[1] although people of any age may experience them. Episodes may recur for a couple of weeks then suddenly disappear. The symptoms also tend to be different, like the child being able to recall the experience, and while nearly arisen, hallucinate. Strong evidence has shown that a predisposition to night terrors and other parasomniac disorders can be passed genetically. Though there are a multitude of triggers, emotional stress during the previous day and a high fever are thought to precipitate most episodes. Ensuring the right amount of sleep is an important factor. Night terrors may also be caused by stress and constipation and other irregular bowel movements or lack thereof. Special consideration must be used when the subject suffers from narcolepsy, as there may be a link.

Common elements

A typical night terror episode usually occurs in the first hour of sleep. The child sits up in bed and screams, appearing awake but is confused, disoriented, and unresponsive to stimuli. Although the child seems to be awake, the child does not seem to be aware of the parents' presence and usually does not talk. The child may thrash around in bed and does not respond to comforting by the parents. The child's heart rate can escalate during the terror, along with sweating and harsh breathing. [1]

Most episodes last only a few minutes, but they may last up to 3 hours before the child relaxes and returns to normal sleep.

In some cases the night terror could be recalled by the person, depending on age and the nature of the episode.

Treatment

Since night terrors are most commonly triggered by being overtired, sometimes no treatment is necessary except for a bedtime schedule that ensures proper sleep. If the night terrors are more frequent, however, it has been suggested that the sufferer should be awakened from sleep just before the time when the terrors occur most to interrupt the sleep cycle. [1]

In adults

Though the symptoms of night terrors in adolescents and adults are similar, the etiology, prognosis and treatment are qualitatively different. These night terrors can occur each night if the sufferer does not eat a proper diet, get the appropriate amount of sleep, is enduring stressful events in their life or if they remain untreated. Adult night terrors are much less common, often trauma-based rather than genetic, chronic, and often respond to treatment in the form of psychotherapy and antidepressant medication. There is some evidence of a link between adult night terrors and hypoglycemia.[1]

In addition to night terrors, some adult night terror sufferers have many of the characteristics of abused and depressed individuals including inhibition of aggression,[2] self-directed anger,[2] passivity,[3] anxiety, impaired memory,[4] and the ability to ignore pain.[5]

See also

Bibliography

  • Carranza, Christopher. Banishing Night Terrors and Nightmares Kensington Books, 2004.

References

  1. ^ a b c Iannelli, Vincent (March 23, 2003). "Night Terrors". http://pediatrics.about.com/cs/sleep/a/night_terrors.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-04.  From about.com
  2. ^ a b Kales, J; Kales A, Soldatos CR, Caldwell AB, Charney DS & Martin ED (1980). "Night terrors. Clinical characteristics and personality patterns". Archives of General Psychiatry 37 (12): 1413–17. PMID 7447622. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=ShowDetailView&TermToSearch=7447622. Retrieved 2007-05-31. 
  3. ^ Kales, JC; Cadieux RJ, Soldatos CR & Kales A. (1982). "Psychotherapy with night terror patients". American Journal of Psychotherapy 36 (3): 399–407. PMID 7149087. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=ShowDetailView&TermToSearch=7149087. Retrieved 2007-05-31. 
  4. ^ Horowitz, MJ (1999). Essential papers on posttraumatic stress disorder. New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-3559-2. 
  5. ^ Chu, J (2001). Rebuilding Shattered Lives: The Responsible Treatment of Complex Post-Traumatic and Dissociative Disorders. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471247324. 

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Night terror" Read more