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Taking An Inventory of Your Sleep Habits
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Discussing Sleep Problems With Your Doctor
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Getting the Family into a Back-to-School Sleep Routine
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When Trauma Strikes and Sleep is Lost
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Why Can't You Sleep Like a Baby?
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Staying Healthy Through Stress Reduction
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What is Narcolepsy?
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Cancer and Cancer Treatment: Can it Affect Sleep?
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What Can You Do About Insomnia?
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Paying the Price of a Poor Night's Sleep
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Gaining Control Over Sleep Problems
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When Worries Surface at Night: Sleep and Anxiety
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Why Can't You Sleep?: Understanding Sleep Problems
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Late-life Sleep Problems: What's Normal?
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The Link Between Sleep and Depression
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Can Poor Sleep Affect Your Weight?
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Effects of Menopause on Sleep
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Sleep and Heart Disease: What's the Link?
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Secrets of the Bedroom: What Happens When You Sleep?
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The Effect of Poor Sleep on Health
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Sleep disorders are a group of syndromes characterized by disturbance in the individual's amount of sleep, quality or timing of sleep, or in behaviors or physiological conditions associated with sleep.
Although sleep is a basic behavior in animals as well as humans, researchers still do not completely understand all of its functions in maintaining health. Since 1975, however, laboratory studies on human volunteers have yielded information about the different types of sleep. Researchers have learned about the cyclical patterns of different types of sleep and their relationships to breathing, heart rate, brain waves, and other physical functions. These measurements are obtained by a technique called polysomnography. There are about 70 different sleep disorders. To qualify for the diagnosis of sleep disorder, the condition must be a persistent problem, cause the patient significant emotional distress, and interfere with his or her social, academic, or occupational functioning.
There are five stages of human sleep. Four stages have non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, with unique brain wave patterns and physical changes occurring. Dreaming occurs in the fifth stage, during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
Sleep cycles vary with a person's age. Children and adolescents have longer periods of stage three and stage four NREM sleep than do middle aged or elderly adults. Because of this difference, the doctor needs to consider the individual's age when evaluating a sleep disorder. Total REM sleep also declines with age.
The average length of nighttime sleep varies among individuals. Most people sleep between seven and nine hours a night. This population average appears to be constant throughout the world. In temperate climates, however, people often notice that sleep time varies with the seasons. It is not unusual for people in North America and Europe to sleep about 40 minutes longer per night during the winter. Infants can regularly sleep up to 16 hours a day. The total amount of sleep declines as the infant gets older. Teenagers may actually need more sleep than slightly younger children and often sleep nine or more hours a day.
Sleep disorders are classified based on what causes them. Primary sleep disorders are distinguished as those that are not caused by other mental disorders, prescription medications, substance abuse, or medical conditions. The two major categories of primary sleep disorders are the dyssomnias and the parasomnias.
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Author Info: Tish Davidson A.M., Rebecca J. Frey PhD, Thomson Gale, Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Children's Health, 2006 |