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Case 19 - Seeking food in the night

from Part IV - Parasomnias

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2010

Antonio Culebras
Affiliation:
Upstate Medical University, New York
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Summary

This chapter discusses the case of a 43-year-old male having problems with his nocturnal sleep at the age of 23 when he started to present recurrent nocturnal awakenings from sleep associated with involuntary eating. It presents the clinical history, examination, follow-up, treatment, diagnosis, and the results of the procedures performed on the patient. Actigraphic recordings for 2 weeks disclosed persistent muscular activity during the nocturnal period and two to five episodes per night of further enhanced muscular activity that corresponded to the eating episodes noted by the patient in his diary. The sleep medicine specialist established a diagnosis of sleep-related eating disorder (SRED) based on the clinical history and on the results of the video-polysomnography (PSG) recording. Low-dosage dopaminergic agents such as levodopa/carbidopa at bedtime, sometimes combined with codeine and/or clonazepam, bromocriptine and pramipexole, have been shown to reduce the eating episodes.
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Chapter
Information
Case Studies in Sleep Neurology
Common and Uncommon Presentations
, pp. 131 - 138
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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