In order to evaluate verbal memory consolidation during sleep in subjects experiencing sleepwalking or sleep terror, 19 patients experiencing sleepwalking/sleep terror and 19 controls performed two verbal memory tasks (16-word list from the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test, and a 220- and 263-word modified story recall test) in the evening, followed by nocturnal video polysomnography (n = 29) and morning recall (night-time consolidation after 14 h, n = 38). The following morning, they were given a daytime learning task using the modified story recall test in reverse order, followed by an evening recall test after 9 h of wakefulness (daytime consolidation, n = 38). The patients experiencing sleepwalking/sleep terror exhibited more frequent awakenings during slow-wave sleep and longer wakefulness after sleep onset than the controls. Despite this reduction in sleep quality among sleepwalking/sleep terror patients, they improved their scores on the verbal tests the morning after sleep compared with the previous evening (+16 ± 33%) equally well as the controls (+2 ± 13%). The performance of both groups worsened during the daytime in the absence of sleep (-16 ± 15% for the sleepwalking/sleep terror group and -14 ± 11% for the control group). There was no significant correlation between the rate of memory consolidation and any of the sleep measures. Seven patients experiencing sleepwalking also sleep-talked during slow-wave sleep, but their sentences were unrelated to the tests or the list of words learned during the evening. In conclusion, the alteration of slow-wave sleep during sleepwalking/sleep terror does not noticeably impact on sleep-related verbal memory consolidation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jsr.12219 | DOI Listing |
Nat Sci Sleep
June 2021
Sleep Medicine Unit, Neurocenter of Southern Switzerland, Ospedale Civico, Lugano, Switzerland.
Objective/background: Night terrors, sleepwalking and confusional arousals are behavioral manifestations of incomplete awakenings from sleep. According to international diagnostic criteria, these behaviors occur in the absence of any mental experience, or in the presence of very limited cognition or dream imagery (eg, a single visual scene). The aim of this study was to systematically and retrospectively investigate the mental content associated with sleep terrors and/or sleepwalking in both children and adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep
November 2017
Speech Therapy School, ELLIADD EA 4661, Franche-Comté University, Besançon, France.
Objectives: Speech is a complex function in humans, but the linguistic characteristics of sleep talking are unknown. We analyzed sleep-associated speech in adults, mostly (92%) during parasomnias.
Methods: The utterances recorded during night-time video-polysomnography were analyzed for number of words, propositions and speech episodes, frequency, gaps and pauses (denoting turn-taking in the conversation), lemmatization, verbosity, negative/imperative/interrogative tone, first/second person, politeness, and abuse.
J Sleep Res
October 2017
Sleep Disorders Unit, Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital, APHP, Paris, France.
This study sought to determine if there is any overlap between the two major non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement parasomnias, i.e. sleepwalking/sleep terrors and rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep Med
November 2015
Sleep Disorders Unit, Chest and Sleep Department, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, APHP, Paris, France; Centre de Recherche de l'Institut du Cerveau et de la Moelle Épinière, INSERM U 1127-CNRS UMR 722, Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris 6, Paris, France; Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06, F-75013 Paris, France. Electronic address:
Background: Choking during sleep may be caused by various respiratory and non-respiratory problems.
Objective: We aimed at documenting a new, rare cause of hallucinatory choking.
Methods: We documented the clinical and video-polysomnographic features of 11 adult patients referred for swallowing and choking during sleep.
J Sleep Res
April 2015
Sleep Disorder Unit, Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital, APHP, Paris, France; Brain Research Institute (CRICM-UPMC-Paris6; Inserm UMR_S 975; CNRS UMR 7225), Paris, France; Sorbonne Universites, UPMC Univ Paris 06, Paris, France.
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