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SLEEP DISODERS

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... synchronization between an individual s internal clock and the external schedule Treatment is best accomplished with chronotherapy and/ or phototherapy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SLEEP DISODERS


1
SLEEP DISODERS
2
Americans
  • 62 have sleep problems once wkly or more
  • 40 sleepy enough during the day to interfere
    with activities
  • 62 drive while drowsy
  • 27 have fallen asleep while driving
  • 60 children feel parents are tired during the
    day
  • 15 children admit falling asleep at school

3
Women
Males
1/3 of men get less than 6 hours sleep (during
week)
  • 79 report sleep disturbance during pregnancy
  • 36 peri-menopausal women have disturbed sleep
  • 25 suffer from significant daytime sleepiness
  • 30 disturbed sleep interferes with daily
    activity, 27 job performance is impaired
  • 24 say sleep gets in the way of caring for family

4
COMORBIDITIES
  • 40-45 of those with insomnia hypersomnia have
    another Axis I disorder
  • Mood Disorders 4x higher
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Schizophrenia
  • Substance abuse

5
Normal Sleep
  • Normal Sleep patterns (cycles)
  • Non REM
  • REM
  • Circadian rhythm
  • Drugs influence on sleep
  • Genetics of sleep

6
Sleep Disorder
  • Physiology of sleep
  • Sleep Stages
  • NREM Sleep
  • REM Sleep
  • Sleep-Regulating Processes
  • Circadian Rhythm
  • Endogenous vs. exogenous factor
  • Homeostasis
  • Balance o f sleep and awake

7
Influences on Sleep
  • Developmental Changes
  • Newborns and Infants
  • Children
  • Adolescents
  • Young and Middle Adults
  • Older Adults myth
  • Amount of sleepF (genetics, preferences,
    lifestyle, environment)

8
Influences on Sleep (Contd)
  • Medical Disorders and Treatments i.e.. Asthma,
    hyperthyroidism, COPD
  • Drugs and Chemical Substances i.e. alcohol,
    lithium, cocaine-gt CNS was affected
  • Jet lag

9
Sleep Disorders
  • Etiology
  • Signs and Symptoms/Diagnostic Criteria
  • Dyssomnias abnormalities in the amount, quality,
    or timing of sleep
  • Narcolepsy
  • breathing-related sleep disorders
  • periodic limb movement disorder
  • insomnia
  • Parasomnias abnormal behavioral or physiological
    events associated with sleep
  • sleepwalking
  • tooth grinding

10
DYSSOMNIAS
11
PRIMARY INSOMNIA
  • difficulty initiating and maintaining sleep
  • awakenings that occur much earlier than desired
  • sleep that is non-restorative and of poor quality
  • result in impairment in daytime function.

12
  • Prevalence rates are higher in women and increase
    with age.
  • Associated with reduced quality of life, mood
    disorders and increased health services usage
  • Represents a significant economic burden in the
    US, with estimated direct costs of 13.9 billion
    annually.

13
Causes of Insomnia
  • Change in sleep environments
  • Jet lag
  • Changes in work shift
  • Excessive noise
  • Unpleasant room temperature
  • Stressful life events
  • Medical condition
  • Medications
  • Poor sleep hygiene

14
Behavioral Model of Insomnia
  • Insomnia occurs acutely in relation to both
    predisposing and precipitating factors
  • The chronic form of the disorder is maintained by
    maladaptive coping behaviors.
  • A state of conditioned arousal may develop in
    which situations associated with sleep become
    alerting rather than relaxing- further impairing
    sleep.

15
Insomnia Cycle
16
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia
  • change poor sleep habits and faulty beliefs about
    sleep
  • promote good sleep hygiene
  • THROUGH.
  • sleep restriction, stimulus control, relaxation
    techniques, education and good sleep practices.

17
  • CBT is as successful as medications in the acute
    treatment (4-8 weeks) of insomnia.
  • It is more effective than medications in the long
    term.
  • Average of 50-60 improvement
  • Long term studies reveal a sustained improvement
    in sleep quality and duration.
  • Patients continued to experience improvement over
    follow-up periods of gt1year.

18
Other Treatments
  • Pharmacologic therapy
  • Benzodiazepines / related hypnotics
  • Antidepressants
  • Antihistamines
  • Melatonin
  • Light

19
BREATHING-RELATED SLEEP DISORDER
  • Unlike people with insomnia, this is a
    structural/ anatomical problem with physiological
    consequences
  • Treatment with oral appliance or surgery is
    needed
  • Sleep maintenance, sleep walking, or other
    consequences are generally relieved after
    treatment but..
  • Co-occurring sleep disorders may need
    psychological treatment.

20
Sleep Apnea
  • Obstructive sleep apnea
  • Clinical manifestations
  • Central sleep apnea
  • Restrictive lung disease
  • Neuromuscular disease
  • Cardiac
  • Neurological

21
Other sleep disorders
  • Narcolepsy
  • Genetic Aspects of narcolepsy
  • Irresistible attacks of refreshing sleep daily
    for 3 months
  • Diagnosis
  • Cataplexy- brief periods of loss of muscle tone
  • REM disordered transitions- can report
    hallucinations, sleep paralysis at transitions
    between wakefulness and sleep
  • Treatment of narcolepsy
  • Stimulants, REM suppressants
  • Behavioral adjustments

22
Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder
  • Causes insomnia because of a lack of
    synchronization between an individuals internal
    clock and the external schedule
  • Treatment is best accomplished with chronotherapy
    and/ or phototherapy

23
(No Transcript)
24
Specifiers
  • Delayed Sleep Type- late sleep onset late
    awakening
  • Shift Work Type
  • Unspecified Type
  • Jet Lag Type

25
Jet Lag Type
  • Use activities (eating, exercise, sightseeing)
    and exposure to light to try to synchronize body
    rhythms with those of the new environment
  • Melatonin 3 mg about 30 minutes before bedtime on
    the day of travel and for up to four days after
    arrival is appropriate
  • A dose of 0.5 mg has less effect on sleep, but
    otherwise helps adaptation similarly
  • Adult travelers crossing five or more time zones
    are likely to benefit from melatonin

26
  • DYSSOMNIA NOS
  • Environmental Issues
  • Restless Legs Syndrome
  • Periodic Limb Movements

27
PARASOMNIAS
28
Parasomnias
  • Sleep disorders characterized by abnormal
    behavioral or physiological events which occur
    during sleep or during sleep-wake transitions.
  • Parasomnias typically do not cause insomnia or
    excessive sleepiness

29
  • Sleep Terror- awakening with fear, dream amnesia
    and unresponsiveness VS.
  • Nightmare- awakening with detailed threatening
    dream recall with rapid alertness
  • Sleepwalking- activities without responsiveness
    and difficulty awakening
  • NOS

30
GMC and Sleep
  • Parkinsonism
  • Neuromuscular disease
  • Respiratory disease
  • Dementia
  • Epileptic seizures
  • Cardiovascular disease
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