This is a
groundbreaking step for pediatric sleep medicine. It's a big change. It's
important, because it tells pediatricians that sleep disorders in children are
serious. It tells parents that snoring isn't just a cute thing where a child is
doing something adults do.
November 29, 2012
Children Who Snore Need to Be Evaluated for Sleep Apnea
Based on a
review of over 3,000 research studies, the American Academy of Pediatrics recently
published new guidelines recommending that children should be screened for
snoring every time they visit their pediatrician.
July 30, 2012
Working Sleepy Means Working Slow
By Anuj Chandra, M.D., D.ABSM
When you work late at night, you probably know you're
feeling more and more tired. But researchers have found that your actions may
get slower and slower, even if you don't realize what's happening.
Researchers in Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston have found that lack of sleep can affect
how you perform certain tasks, regardless of how tired you think you are. The
findings were published last week in the online Journal of Vision.
July 23, 2012
Narcolopesy Drug is Being Abused
Perhaps it is inevitable in this day and time that some
people will find a way to abuse any prescription drug. But it feels more like a
personal affront when it's a drug whose proper use is so effective against
certain sleep disorders.
Provigil is the trade name for modafinil, a stimulant that was
approved by the FDA in 1998 for the treatment of narcolepsy and some other
sleep disorders that compromise daytime alertness. It is a carefully regulated
drug because it's a stimulant. But a small number of people are obtaining it
over the Internet and using is for alertness and cognitive enhancement.
July 13, 2012
Researchers Have Found Chemical Controllers of Sleep Paralysis
By Anuj Chandra, M.D., D.ABSM
Earlier this month, I shared new research about risk factors for REM Sleep Behavior Disorder, in which people kick or punch during sleep. Now there is more research that points – eventually – toward new treatments for REM Sleep Behavior Disorder.
Earlier this month, I shared new research about risk factors for REM Sleep Behavior Disorder, in which people kick or punch during sleep. Now there is more research that points – eventually – toward new treatments for REM Sleep Behavior Disorder.
July 6, 2012
Sleep Deprivation Affects the Body Just Like Physical Stress
By Anuj Chandra, M.D., D.ABSM
According to new
research from the Netherlands, severe sleep loss causes physical effects on the
immune system that are very similar to the body's response to stress.
In a study
reported in the journal SLEEP, scientists from Erasmus MC University
Medical Center in the Netherlands and the University of Surrey in Great Britain
had 15 healthy young men get plenty of sleep and abstain from caffeine, alcohol
and medications for a week. Then they made them stay awake for 29 hours and
compared how their immune systems were acting when they had plenty of rest and
when they were sleep deprived.
July 2, 2012
New Research Shows Risk Factors for REM Sleep Behavior Disorder
By Anuj Chandra, M.D., D.ABSM
A new research study has shown a connection between
smoking, head injury and pesticide use and a rare sleep disorder called REM
Sleep Behavior Disorder, in which people kick or punch during sleep.
Normally, when we go into rapid eye movement (REM) sleep
and start dreaming, we lose muscle tone and remain literally paralyzed for as
long as we are dreaming. People with REM Sleep Behavior Disorder do not lose
the ability to move, however. Instead, their dreams actually cause them to
move. In mild cases, they may kick or punch during sleep. In more severe cases,
they may get out of bed and act out their dreams. Whether the condition is mild
or severe, people with this disorder may be a danger to themselves and to their
bed partner because their movements can sometimes become violent.
June 20, 2012
Sleeping Less than Six Hours per Night Means Four Times Greater Stroke Risk
By Dr. Anuj Chandra, M.D., D.ABSM
There is new
evidence of the connection between insufficient sleep and stroke. I just
returned from the SLEEP conference in Boston, the 26th annual meeting of the
Associated Professional Sleep Societies, where the research was presented.
Sleep
researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham found that people who
routinely sleep only six hours a night have a risk of stroke four times greater
than people who got seven to eight hours of sleep every night.
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