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Explore various types of somnipathy such as insomnia and narcolepsy and learn about different classifications like dyssomnias and parasomnias. Discover how medical and psychiatric conditions can lead to sleep disorders and the importance of treating comorbid disorders. Delve into the causes and risk factors influencing insomnia while considering research complications and attribution theory. Engage in interactive learning about narcolepsy, sleepwalking, and other sleep disorders.
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Objectives • To be able to identify types (classifications) of somnipathy • To work with other members of the class to start planning a half hour lesson on one sleep disorder.
Have a go at sleep dash!! • http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/sleep/sheep/ Now drink some caffeine!! Wait 15mins and try again!! What do you predict will happen?
Dyssomnias- a broad category including insomnia and hypersomnolence (too much sleep) Parasomnias – strange behaviours during sleep Medical or psychiatric conditions that can produce somnipathy Major Classifications of Somnipathy
Key question • If some problems with sleep are caused by other disorders, which disorder should we treat? • For example if depression causes insomnia - how do we know that insomnia is not the cause of the depression? • Answer – if we don’t know for sure we should treat both disorders as being comorbid.
Insomnia (Primary and secondary) Narcolepsy Obstructive sleep apnea Restless legs syndrome Klein-Levin Syndrome (sleeping beauty syndrome) Post-traumatic hypersomnia Dyssomnias- a broad category including insomnia and hypersomnolence
Night terrors Bruxism (tooth grinding) Sleepwalking (somnambulism) Sleeptalking (somniloquy) Exploding head syndrome! Parasomnias – strange behaviours during sleep
Psychoses Anxiety Depression Panic Alcoholism Sleeping sickness OTHER Causes Might include shift work and jet travel Medical or psychiatric conditions that can produce somnipathy
Check terms so far • What are the three types of somnipathy (sleep disorders)? • What is insomnia? • What kind of somnipathy is insomnia? • What is narcolepsy? • What kind of somnipathy is narcolepsy? • What is sleepwalking? • What kind of somnipathy is sleepwalking?
Traditionally, sleep disorders have been divided into primary and secondary disorders. Primary Insomnia - result from an endogenous disturbance in the sleeping mechanism, often complicated by learned behaviours and bad sleep habits. Insomnia the only problem. Insomnia occurs with no cause for more than 1 month (DSM) Secondary Insomnia - are said to be the result of another disorder –e.g. depression, pregnancy, respiratory problems or gastroesophageal reflux disease, shift work, too much caffeine or alcohol INSOMNIA
In 2007 Dr Ancoli-Israel suggested that this is a false distinction and that all sleep disorders should be regarded as comorbid, and receive the same emphasis in treatment. BUT Ohayon and Roth 2003 – Studied 15,000 Europeans – found that insomnia preceded cases of mood disorders. Therefore treat the insomnia whether it is primary or secondary
Risk Factors Influencing Insomnia • Age and Gender – older people and women more likely – illnesses (arthritis, diabetes) and menopause (hormone fluctuations) • Parasomnias - increase likelihood of insomnia - • -Sleep Apnoea • -Sleep walking • -Teeth grinding • Personality – Kales et al 1976 – insomniacs more likely to internalise psychological disturbance than acting out problems or being aggressive
Research Complications • Synoptic point • Chronic insomnia highly complex • Lots of causes of insomnia – stress, depression, poor sleep hygiene, age, gender e.t.c • Unlikely to be explained by one factor • Therefore - Difficult to draw conclusions
Attribution Theory • Synoptic Point (cognitive approach) • One cause of Primary Insomnia is a person’s belief that they are going to have difficulty sleeping. • Self fulfilling – tense before sleep • Attribute sleep problems to ‘insomnia’ • Treatment – • Train them to be convinced the source of problem lies elsewhere • Storms and Nisbett 1970 – insomniacs given apill – half told it would stimulate them and the other half it would sedate them. • Those expecting arousal went to sleep faster because they attributed their arousal to the pill and actually relaxed!!
Narcolepsy • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MBCeKn0Oeo narcolepsy 3 mins • Cataplexy – loss of muscular control during the day • Feeling sleepy all the time • Triggered by anger, fear, amusement or stress • 1/2000 suffer, starts in adolescence
Sleep Walking • Most common in children – 20% children, 3% adults • Only occurs during NREM/SWS sleep • Related to Night Terrors • Sleep walker not conscious and later has no knowledge of events during sleep walking
Lecturer for a day • In groups you are going to prepare a lesson on one sleep disorder • The presentation must include a powerpoint and a handout with questions/notes to be completed during the lesson • The presentation/lesson should last approx 30 minutes • It should be as interactive as possible • It must be ready by Thursday.
Critically consider explanations of disorders of sleep (25 marks) • Introduction – Define ‘sleep disorder’ and outline classifications. Key question – should sleep problems caused by other disorders be treated? • AO1 Define Insomnia and give explanations (Primary and secondary) • AO2 Evaluate the explanations of insomnia with supporting/opposing evidence • AO1 Define Narcolepsy and give explanations (REM,HLA and Hypocretin) • AO2 Evaluate explanations of Narcolepsy with supporting/opposing evidence • AO1 Define Sleep walking and give explanations (Incomplete arousal, GABA ) • AO2 Evaluate explanations using supporting/opposing evidence • Conclusion –Explanations for disorders are varied although biological causes are often focused on this could be reductionist as seen from attribution theory in insomnia.