Sleep: A Groundbreaking Guide to the Mysteries, the Problems, and the Solutions - Softcover

Schenck, Carlos H.

 
9781583333013: Sleep: A Groundbreaking Guide to the Mysteries, the Problems, and the Solutions

Inhaltsangabe

We spend more than 200,000 hours sleeping in a lifetime, the equivalent of more than 8,000 days. Yet research has only just begun to decode the mysteries behind what can go wrong. Here, Dr. Carlos H. Schenck, one of the most prominent sleep doctors and researchers in the country, takes us on an incredible journey into the mechanisms of sleep, and the spectrum of disorders that can occur when these mechanisms go bizarrely awry.

Dr. Schenck discusses the causes and treatments for common problems-insomnia, restless legs syndrome, sleep apnea, and more. But what sets this book apart is the rare glimpse it offers into the cutting-edge science that he and others have pioneered in identifying, understanding, and explaining the realm of "parasomnias"-the mysterious, more extreme sleep disorders,such as dream enactment, sleep-related eating disorder, sexsomnia, sleepwalking, sleep terrors, sleep paralysis, and even sleep violence, which affect at least 20 million Americans.

Comprehensive, engrossing, and backed by the latest medical research, Sleep is a groundbreaking work about what continues to be one of our most mysterious medical puzzles-making it an indispensable guide for sufferers of all sleep disorders and their families.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Carlos H. Schenck M.D. is a senior staff psychiatrist at the Hennepin County Medical Center and Minnesota Regional Sleep Disorders Center, a renowned interdisciplinary sleep clinic and laboratory, and is an associate professor at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis. A recognized expert, he has identified and named numerous parasomnias with his colleagues, and is often quoted in the press, including the New York Times, and the New York Times Magazine. He has also appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show and on CNN. He lives in Minneapolis.

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A Tour of Sleep

Considering that people on average will spend 25 years of their lives asleep, it's surprising how little most of us know about what goes on when the lights go off. It's almost as if our waking selves and sleeping selves are two separate beings living in alternate dimensions, never catching more than a passing glimpse of each other.

Most people don't seem very curious or concerned about this odd desire they have to close their eyes, lie down, and blank out for several hours every night...until something goes wrong, or even very, very wrong. Maybe it's that they can't fall asleep, or can't wake up, or find chocolate syrup and raw noodles in their hair in the morning, or have just pummeled their spouse with jackhammer legs, and wonder what in the world happened when they thought they were in bed and supposedly asleep.

Poets and philosophers have painted contradictory images of sleep, but its resemblance to death is often a theme. Edgar Allan Poe called sleep "those little slices of death," John Fletcher named sleep "Brother to Death," and Roman poet Ovid wrote, "What else is sleep but chill death's likeness?" But maybe it's William Shakespeare, who often wrote about insomnia, who captured it best when he called sleep "nature's soft nurse."

While it may look like nothing much is happening while a person is sleeping, there's actually a complicated chain of events going on in the brain, and that chain is vital to our overall health. With all the possibilities for the complicated chain of events to break down or even go haywire, it's surprising that sleep clinics aren't exploding with more people reporting all sorts of sleep problems.

We know that at least 10 percent of the U.S. population has a clinically significant sleep disorder, but it's hard for us to know just how many people have parasomnias—because it's still such a new field of study. Most medical schools continue to allocate little time in their curricula for teaching about sleep and its disorders, so if someone goes to a family doctor with a sleep-related complaint that's out of the ordinary, it's unlikely to be diagnosed and treated properly. And worse, plenty of people don't realize that they have "real" disorders; they assume that their strange sleep behaviors are just their own weird quirks that they have to live with. Many of my own patients had no idea anyone else had ever gone through what they'd gone through until they saw a magazine article or television report where a patient from our clinic described the same problems.

There's also reluctance among many to talk about their concerns because of the potential stigma involved. Until recently, even the medical community believed that people who exhibited violent or aggressive or sexual behavior in their sleep probably had unaddressed psychological problems. Surely that man who throws punches and shouts obscenities in his sleep really has some pent-up rage he's not addressing during the day, right? As it turns out, probably not. There are rare cases of parasomnias that are caused by purely psychological issues, but we've now discovered that the vast majority of those with extreme sleep disorders have psychological profiles that look no different from the rest of the population. Their brain chemistry and behavior have gone amok during sleep.

To understand what makes things go so wrong during sleep, though, first we need to know what normal sleep looks like. So let's take a tour.

The Stages of Sleep

There are two basic types of sleep: non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and rapid eye movement (REM). NREM sleep has four stages, and REM sleep is one stage, so together, they comprise five important stages of sleep that cycle throughout the night.

Stage 1 (NREM)

This is the hazy stage when you're just falling asleep. It's a very light sleep, and It's easily disrupted—if someone turns on a light or makes a noise, you'll probably awaken. Often, if you're awakened from your first stage 1 sleep, you don't even know you were asleep. Or you may remember the experience as an interruption or a disjointed train of thought or image. Your alpha rhythm (the predominant rhythm—8 to 12 cycles per second—seen with eyes closed during relaxed wakefulness) is reduced to less than 50 percent of total brain-wave activity, your muscle tone becomes relaxed, your eyes slowly roll back and forth, and you may experience sudden muscle contractions (hypnic jerks) that jolt you awake, sometimes with the sensation that you were falling. We aren't sure yet why these contractions happen, but it's nothing to worry about. Some people, however, move rapidly or even race through stage 1 sleep and virtually jump into stages 2, 3, and 4 sleep.

Your brain activity, though mixed, is dominated by theta waves, which run at 4 to 7 cycles per second. This stage usually lasts less than 10 minutes, but can last 30 minutes or even two hours in people with sleep-onset difficulties.

To successfully enter sleep, a person must be able to disengage from wakefulness while being able to engage in sleep, a necessary two-step, mind-brain-body process with inherent vulnerabilities.

Stage 2 (NREM)

This stage is generally considered the "baseline" of sleep—the clear-cut starting point. It's difficult to pinpoint to exact second someone falls asleep because it doesn't happen all at once, and a person may report being awake when the tests appear to show stage 1 sleep, or alternating between wakefulness and stage 1 sleep.

In stage 2, you're still in a moderately light sleep, and still fairly easy to arouse, but your heart rate slows down and your temperature drops in preparation for the deeper sleep to come. Your brain activity, which can be measured by scalp electrodes in a sleep lab, will show slower waves mixed with sporadic bursts of faster waves called sleep spindlesand also a brain wave pattern known as K-complexes that look like the letter "K". Sleep spindles and K-complexes are hallmarks of stage 2 sleep. As an adult, you'll spend about half of your total sleep time in stage 2.

Stage 3 (NREM)

Now you transition down to slow-wave sleep or delta sleep. Between 20 and 50 percent of this stage is made up of high-voltage, slow-wave activity known as delta waves, which run at 1 to 3 cycles per second. Stages 3 and 4 are often grouped together because there's not much that distinguishes them from a physiological standpoint.

Stage 4 (NREM)

It's a common misconception that REM sleep is the deepest sleep. Actually, stage 4 NREM is the deepest sleep, closely followed by stage 3. When you've been sleep deprived, your body craves delta sleep and will try to make up for lost time by getting you to stage 4 faster and keeping you there longer. When people say that someone is "out like a light" or in a "dead sleep," the person is probably in stage 3 or 4, when it's very difficult to arouse someone. This is the stage from which sleep terrors and sleepwalking are most likely to occur. Stage 4 is also the stage, it's thought, when the body does most of its repair work.

REM Sleep

We name this stage after the most easily seen physical marker: rapid eye movements. When a person is in the REM stage, he or she will often show bursts of eye flutters and back-and-forth movements, possibly in conjunction with dreams. This is the stage when the most vivid and prolonged dreaming occurs. Your brain is highly active (on sleep graphs, it looks almost the same as your brain activity when you're awake), but your body is temporarily paralyzed by an active, generalized inhibition originating in the lower brain. Your muscles—even the ancillary respiratory muscles other than the diaphragm—are "shut down" and completely inert, and it's believed...

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9781583332702: Sleep: The Mysteries, the Problems, and the Solutions

Vorgestellte Ausgabe

ISBN 10:  1583332707 ISBN 13:  9781583332702
Verlag: Avery Pub Group, 2007
Hardcover