Top Banner
Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013
12

Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

May 26, 2018

Download

Documents

lyphuc
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks

Sleep DisordersMichael Babcock

Summer 2013

Page 2: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Scenario

-4 yo boy-screaming at night-lasts 30 minutes-occurs about 2 hours after going to bed-inconsolable during crying, then falls back asleep-no bed wetting-no limb shaking-eyes closed-no sedation in the AM

Page 3: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Sleep Screen – BEARS

• B – Bedtime issues• E – Excessive daytime

sleepiness (can exhibit as motor over-activity, inattentiveness, irritability, oppositional defiance)

• A – night Awakenings• R – Regularity and duration• S – Snoring• If concerns

– Movements– Meds

Page 4: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Insomnia

• Onset or Maintenance?• Usually behavioral• Psychosocial• Anxiety (separation)• Depression• Medical problems – chronic pain,

GERD, breathing problems, medications

Page 5: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Insomnia

• Sleep onset Association– Prolonged night awakenings– Child has learned to fall

asleep with Associations requiring parents – feeding, rocking, reading; can't self-soothe.

– Tx – break connection; put child to be while drowsy but not asleep.

• Limit-setting subtype– Older children– Active resistance to bedtime– Verbal protests and repeated

demands– Can manifest as fearful

behavior (crying, clinging)– Usually due to caregiver

inconsistency with bedtime rules

– Can have medical underlying causes – asthma, medications, sleep disorder – RLS, anxiety.

– Tx – caregiver enforces rules

Page 6: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Restless Leg Syndrome

• An urge to move legs, usually accompanied by unpleasant sensation in legs

• These symptoms:– Begin or worsen during

rest/inactivity– Relieved by movement– Occur exclusively or

predominantly in evening– Not solely accounted for as

symptoms of another medical/behavioral condition

• Hx – children may have difficulty explaining this unpleasant feeling – pain should not be only feeling.

• Differential – Periodic leg movement disorder – actual leg movements during sleep without sensation – this can be due to other sleep disorders.

• Work-up – iron studies• Tx – iron supplementation; off

label use of gabapentin, benzo's, clonidine, dopamine agonist used less often in children.

Page 7: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Excessive daytime sleepiness

• A sleepy child may not appear sleepy – can be inattentive, hyperactive (trying to stay awake), aggressive, disruptive (sleep-deprived frontal cortex can't regulate emotion)

• Insufficient sleep – insomnia• Inadequate sleep hygiene• Medication side-effects• Periodic limb movement disorder• Idiopathic hypersomnia• endocrine/metabolic problems• Narcolepsy • OSA

Page 8: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Narcolepsy

• Narcolepsy– Excessive daytime sleepiness– Sleep paralysis– Hypnagogic hallucinations– Cataplexy

• Sudden loss of tone• Precipitated by emotion (laughing, anger)• REM creep

– Dx – polysomnography, MSLT

Page 9: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

• Excessive daytime sleepiness• Symptoms – Snoring, with

apneic pauses• But also

– Daytime nasal obstruction– Mouth breathing– Trouble eating/meat refusal– Behavior problems– Bed-wetting– Restless sleep– Sweaty sleep (needs fan on)– AM headache– Poor seizure control

• Who has OSA– 2-3 % of normal

development children have OSA

– 10% of normal children will be habitual snorers – don't have OSA

– 50% of children with Down's– ~50% in obese children

• Why is it bad– Hypertension, CHF, stroke,

diabetes, difficulty losing weight.

Page 10: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Parasomnias

• Disorders of Non-REM arousal– Sleep walking– Sleep terrors– Confusional arousals

• REM sleep disorders– Nightmares– Sleep paralysis– REM sleep behavior disorder

• Narcolepsy• SSRI• neurodevelopmental

• Sleep-related movement disorders– Rhythmic movement

• infants/toddlers• Start at sleep onset• Head rolling/head

banging/body rocking– Bruxism– RLS/PLMD

• Hypnic starts– Brief jerks occurring with

falling asleep/awakening– May have sensation of falling

Page 11: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

Non-REM arousal parasomnias

• Usually during first 1/3 of night• Usually only one event/night• Increased arousals cause increased problems

– OSA, RLS, GERD.• Triggered by sleep deprivation, fever.• Toddler and school-aged kids.• Usually resolve with time

– sleep-walking most likely to persist.• Not tired the next day• No stereotypic motor movements• Last 5-30 minutes

• Differential – nocturnal seizures– Anytime during night, more often

in transition periods– Last 30 seconds – 5 minutes– Multiple events nightly– Daytime seizures– Daytime irritability/lethargy– Older age of onset.

• Differential – panic attack, GERD.• Dx -home videos, polysomnography or

overnight EEG.• Tx – low dose benzo.

Page 12: Sleep Disorders - Vanderbilt University Medical Center€¦ · PPT file · Web view · 2013-07-07Pediatric Neurology Quick Talks Sleep Disorders Michael Babcock Summer 2013 Scenario

References

-Uptodate articles – pediatric sleep, NREM sleep disorders, parasomnias, narcolepsy, RLS