Title: Update on Pediatric Parasomnias
1Update on Pediatric Parasomnias
Golda Milo-Manson, MD, FRCPC
2Objectives
- To outline the parasomnias and an approach to the
clinical evaluation and management of these sleep
disorders - To highlight development in the evaluation and
management of these disorders
3Parasomnia Topics
- Nightmares
- Night terrors
- Sleepwalking
- RMD - Rhythmic movement disorder
4Reminder of normal sleep physiology
- 2 types of sleep ( REM, NREM)
- NREM has 4 stages, stage III and IV called slow
wave sleep - Slow wave sleep predominates in first 1/3 of
night - REM sleep predominates in last ½ of the night
5NREM sleep
- 4 stages roughly parallel the depth of sleep
- Arousal threshold lowest in stage 1 and highest
in stage IV - Stage of relatively low brain activity which the
regulatory capacity of brain is active and body
movements are preserved - Stage 1, may have brief involuntary muscle
contractions ( hypnic jerks)
6REM sleep
- Paralysis or nearly absent muscle tone
- (except control of breathing and erectile tissue)
- High levels of cortical activity
- Dreaming
- Episodic bursts of phasic eye movements
- First REM- 70 to 100 minutes after sleep onset
and lasts about 5 minutes
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8Introduction What is a Parasomnia?
- Undesirable motor, autonomic or experiential
phenomenon that occur exclusively or
predominantly during the sleeping state - Int. Class of Sleep Disorders, 1990
9Nightmares/REM Arousal
- Occur in last third of night during REM sleep
- Onset 3-6 years
- Prevalence 10-50
- Child often cries out, visibly upset
- Easily consoled by caregiver
- Child can recall episode with vivid detail
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11Nightmare Treatment
- Caregiver comfort at time of episode
- Minimize night time discussion
- If stressor can be identified decrease exposure
- Rule out medication use
12Night Terror/Slow Wave Arousal
- Sudden onset, sudden resolution
- Generally occurs during the transition from
non-rem to rem sleep - Generally in 1st/third of sleep
- Considered a normal phenomenon
- Begins 18 mo
- Prevalence 6 healthy children
- Often occurs in clusters, disappears for several
mo then recur
13Night Terror/Slow Wave Arousal
- Very frightening for caregivers
- Child inconsolable
- Often doesnt appear to recognize parents
- Duration seconds-10 min.
- No recall in a.m.
- Child may bolt upright, stare, diaphoretic,
irregular breathing
14Evaluation of Night Terrors
- Diagnosis by history
- Consider pathology if starting in school age
child - Take careful sleep history to exclude other
treatable causes of night terrors, e.g..
disrupted sleep, sleep apnea - Review sleep hygiene if history of insomnia, poor
sleep continuity
15Review of sleep hygiene
- Environment
- Dark, quiet, comfortable
- Schedule
- Regular waking time, and bedtime
- Consistent nap time
- Activities
- No frightening T.V. or stories
- No vigorous physical activities before bedtime
- Consistent bedtime routine and soothing methods
- Child put into bed awake
16Good sleep hygiene- continued
- Avoid caffeine/nicotine/ethanol
- No nicotine/ethanol
- Avoid caffeinated foods/beverages in late
afternoon, evening - Exercise
- Regular exercise before evening promotes sleep
- Sunlight
- Exposure to sunlight or bright light in morning
17Night Terror Treatment
- Parent education and reassurance
- Outgrow by teen years
- Ensure safe environment
- Do not awaken the child
- Do not discuss in a.m.
18Guillement et al. Peds. 2003Sleep Walking and
Sleep Terrors What Triggers Them?
- n84
- 51/84 had additional sleep disorder (SDB, RLS)
- 45/51 had resolution of parasomnia with treatment
of SDB, RLS
19For more resistant night terrors
- Scheduled awakenings, Lask 1997
- 5-6 nights recording of timing
- Wake the child 10-15 minutes before and maintain
awake x 5 minutes - Follow procedure 5-7 nights
20Medication
- not generally recommended however start
benzodiazepine to ? arousals between sleep stages
- tolerance, rebound, hyperactivity may develop
- Evidence Level C
21Sleepwalking/Slow Wave Arousal
- Occurs during transition from non-rem to rem
sleep - 1st third of night
- No correlation to emotional disturbance
- Prevalence 15-30 of children have at least one
episode - Possible role for heredity
22Sleepwalking/Slow Wave Arousal
- Purposeless walking about the home, poor
coordinated movement - May appear calm or agitated
- Possible triggers sleep deprivation/extreme
fatigue - Generally no recall
- Duration seconds 30 minutes
23Sleepwalking Treatment
- Ensure safe environment
- Mechanism to alert parents
- Talk calmly and lead back to bed
- Do not discuss in a.m.
- Document frequency and timing ? scheduled
awakenings (Level C evidence) - Medication for intractable cases benzodiazepine
however tolerance or rebound effects
24Frank et al. J Ped Psychology. 1997
- Case series of scheduled awakenings in
sleepwalking - 100 success, maintained at 6-month follow-up
25Definition Rhythmic Movement Disorder
- Sleep-related stereotypic, repetitive movements
of the head, neck or large muscle groups,
occurring with a frequency of 0.5-2 Hz., which
can persist for a few minutes to many hours and
may occur almost nightly
26When does RMD occur
- All sleep stages
- In waking state
- In 7 children studied with 37 episodes, usually
stage 2 NREM sleep ( Dyken M, Ped. Neur, 1997)
27 Sallustro, J of Peds, 1978 Head Banging in
normal children
- Incidence 3.3- 15.2
- Age- typically begins at 8.6 months and stops
before age 4 - Malesfemales 31
- Prior to onset of head banging, most head bangers
display other rhythmic habits, mostly body
rocking - Head banging usually takes place at bedtime
28 Klackenberg G, Acta Ped Scand 1971 RMD
Incidence in normal children
- 66 of healthy children exhibited some form of
rhythmic activity at 9 months of age - Quality of their sleep as good as children
without such activity
29Why children body rock?
- Rocking body movements provide sensations and
pleasure to a child - Movements are tension-releasing
- May help child to cope with frustration
- Highly repetitive rocking in autistic and
severely MR children due to poor behavioural or
emotional repertoire - Vestibular stimulation
- Psychoanalytic interpretation' highly regressive
and narcissistic behaviour with autoerotic
function ( Kempenaers C, Sleep 1994)
30Can RMD be harmful?
- Reported to cause
- Soft tissue injury
- Eye injury
- Skull injury
- Internal carotid artery dissection( abstract
only Jackson MA, Br. Med J, 1983) - Subdural hemorrhage (Mackenzie JM, Lancet, 1991)
31Evaluation and Treatment
- Infants RMD generally benign and resolve with
time - Parental reassurance and protection of the
environment - After 3 years of age- may need neurologic and
psychologic evaluation - Consider evaluation if suggestion of seizure
- Patients with severe MR may need helmets, other
sedating medication
32Take Home Message
- Good history and physical
- Stress good sleep hygiene
- Reassurance