Sleep Agression Treatment Jamestown NY

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Sleep Agression Treatment. You will find helpful, informative articles about Sleep Agression Treatment, including "Sleep Aggression: A Disturbing Phenomenon". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Jamestown, NY that will answer all of your questions about Sleep Agression Treatment.

WCA Hospital Center
(716) 664-8430
207 Foote Avenue
Jamestown, NY
The Sleep Disorder Center of Olean General Hospital
(716) 375-6228
101 N. Main Street
Olean, NY
Bon Secours Sleep Disorder Institute Good Samaritan Hospital
(845) 368-5511
255 Lafayette Avenue
Suffern, NY
HealthBridge Sleep Medicine
(516) 627-7407
1165 Northern Boulevard
Manhasset, NY
Ultimate Health Sleep Disorders Center
(516) 437-7236
2343 New Hyde Park Road
New Hyde Park, NY
Seneca Sleep Disorders Center
(814) 723-4973
2 Crescent Park W
Warren, PA
Sleep Solutions of New York
(631) 724-4729
257 Middle Country Road
Smithtown, NY
St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center The Sleep Laboratory St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center
(315) 475-3379
945 E. Genesee Street
Syracuse, NY
Sleep Insights
(585) 385-6070
2300 Buffalo Road
Rochester, NY
Comprehensive Center for Sleep Medicine at Mount Sinai Mt. Sinai Medical Center
(212) 241-5098
1176 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

Sleep Aggression: A Disturbing Phenomenon

Sleep aggression is one of several known parasomnias, or sleep disorders that are characterized by unusual or disturbing experiences upon arousal, such as sleepwalking, sleep eating, teeth grinding, sleep talking, bedwetting, and night terrors. Aggressive sleep behavior is actually closely linked to sleepwalking and sleep terrors, and a 2004 study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry also found that sleepwalking violence can be added to this list as a separate, overlapping condition that explains aggressive or even violent behavior following an episode of sleepwalking.

Many different circumstances may be at the root of parasomnias, including family history, unusual sleeping schedules, lack of sleep, stress and psychiatric conditions such as depression and anxiety. Parasomnias often occur during non-REM sleep periods and coincide with one or more of numerous arousals experienced during the night. Upon full awakening, people with parasomnias, including sleep aggression, cannot recall their behavior or experiences.

REM behavior disorder (RBD), another rare condition in which people act out their dreams, can also lead to sleep aggression and even violent actions. Normally, we are in a temporary state of paralysis during REM, or rapid-eye-movement sleep. In a person with RBD, that paralysis is released and physical activity, or acting out of dreams, becomes possible.  RBD occurs most often in older people and during the later part of the night. The key difference between the parasomnia sleep aggression and RBD aggression is that, in RBD, the individual has a clear memory of aggressive behavior.

To differentiate between the two conditions and come up with a diagnosis, a doctor or psychologist must conduct a sleep study to observe the timing and responses to arousals throughout the night over a period of time. A diagnosis is helpful to determine an appropriate treatment plan, which may include medication and self-protective changes in your bedroom...

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