Sleep Center Redlands CA

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Sleep Center. You will find helpful, informative articles about Sleep Center, including "The Link between ADHD and Sleep Disorders". 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 Redlands, CA that will answer all of your questions about Sleep Center.

Loma Linda Sleep Disorders Center Loma Linda University Medical Center
(909) 558-6344
11360 Mountain View Avenue
Loma Linda, CA
Sleep Medicine Center
(408) 730-5858
500 E. Remington Drive
Sunnyvale, CA
North Bay Sleep Medicine Institute, Inc.
(707) 525-9616
585 W. College Avenue
Santa Rosa, CA
Complete Sleep Solutions
(951) 698-4218
39755 Date Street
Murrieta, CA
Midway Sleep Lab
(323) 930-0422
5901 W. Olympic Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA
Philip Rimell Westbrook, MD
909-793-9190
104 E Olive Ave
Redlands, CA
Stockton Sleep Disorders Medical Group
(209) 466-8012
1805 N. California Street
Stockton, CA
Miller Children's Hospital
(562) 424-4815
2801 Atlantic Avenue
Long Beach, CA
Stanislaus Sleep Disorders Center
(209) 522-8881
1400 Florida Avenue
Modesto, CA
Sleep Disorders Institute St. Jude Medical Center
(714) 446-7240
1915 Sunny Crest Drive
Fullerton, CA
Data Provided by:
 

The Link between ADHD and Sleep Disorders

There are more than 70 different types of sleep disorders, Harvard experts say, and up to half of all children diagnosed with ADHD suffer from at least one of them. Sleep disorders are also commonly reported in adults with ADHD. Brain researchers are working hard to find out why.

Up to half of all children diagnosed with ADHD have trouble falling asleep, staying asleep or sleeping peacefully. Up to a quarter have sleep-related breathing problems while even more have movement problems, such as restless legs syndrome, that affect their quality of sleep. Although most clinical studies of sleep disorders and ADHD have been performed on children, adults with ADHD very often report sleep problems as well.

Unraveling the connection between ADHD and sleep disorders is proving to be a complicated task. ADHD can take the form of hyperactive ADHD or inattentive ADHD, and just as these different types of ADHD exhibit v arying symptoms, different types of sleep disorders manifest themselves in unique ways. Some people with ADHD take medication for their symptoms that may affect their sleep, and some do not. At the same time, some people take medication for sleep disorders that may affect ADHD symptoms, while others do not.

Researchers who are trying to figure out which sleep disorders are associated with which type of ADHD, and why, must first untangle a wide array of confounding factors and overlapping symptoms. To confuse things even more, some of the symptoms of sleep disorders and sleep deprivation are very similar to the symptoms of ADHD.

In the past, sleep disorders in people with ADHD have often been associated the psychostimulant medications commonly used to treat ADHD. Now, however, sleep apnea, restless leg syndrome, and other problems that are disruptive to sleep are being recognized as separate disorders that commonly occur with ADHD, not necessarily as a result of medication. At the same time, scientists suspect the answer can be found along the same neural pathway, because these conditions are all linked to imbalances of dopamine, the brain chemical that helps controls movement, emotional response, and sensations of pleasure and pain.

A small study of 22 non-medicated adults diagnosed with ADHD, published in the September 2009 issue of the online version of Journal of Attention Disorders, found that sleep problems such as an inability to stay asleep and sleep quality are associated with hyperactive-impulsive ADHD but not with those people who have inattentive ADHD.

As  Denver psychiatrist William Dodson, M.D. points out, in order for a child to be diagnosed with ADHD, the American Psychiatric Association requires all symptoms to be exhibited by the age of seven. Yet sleep disturbances rarely appear until around the age of 12 1/2. As a result, only recently, as more adults have been diagnosed with ADHD and more studies have focused on adults, have researchers been able to link ADHD directly to sleep disorders and start to sort ...

Click here to read more from Quality Health