Sleep disorders involve any difficulties related to sleeping, including difficulty falling or staying asleep, falling asleep at inappropriate times, excessive total sleep time, or abnormal behaviors associated with sleep.
Causes
More than 100 different disorders of sleeping and waking have been identified. They can be grouped in four main categories:
Problems with falling and staying asleep
Problems with staying awake
Problems with sticking to a regular sleep schedule
Sleep-disruptive behaviors
PROBLEMS WITH FALLING AND STAYING ASLEEP
Insomnia includes any combination of difficulty with falling asleep, staying asleep, intermittent wakefulness and early-morning awakening. Episodes may come and go (be transient), last as long as 2 to 3 weeks (be short-term), or be long-lasting (chronic).
Poor sleeping environment such as excessive noise or light
Caffeine
Alcohol or other drugs
Use of certain medications
Heavy smoking
Physical discomfort
Daytime napping
Counterproductive sleep habits:
Early bedtimes
Excessive time spent awake in bed
Disorders include:
Psychophysiological insomnia (learned insomnia)
Delayed sleep phase syndrome -- where a patient's internal clock is constantly out of synch with the "accepted" day / night phases; for example, patients feel best if they can sleep from 4AM to noon
Hypnotic-dependent sleep disorder -- insomnia that occurs when you stop or become tolerant to certain types of sleep medications
Stimulant-dependent sleep disorder -- insomnia that occurs when you stop or become dependent on certain types of stimulants
PROBLEMS WITH STAYING AWAKE
Disorders of excessive sleepiness are called hypersomnias. These include:
Idiopathic hypersomnia (excessive sleepiness that occurs without an identifiable cause)
Problems may also occur when you do not maintain a consistent sleep and wake schedule. This occurs when traveling between times zones and with shift workers on rotating schedules, particularly nighttime workers.
Sleep disruption disorders include:
Irregular sleep-wake syndrome
Jet lag syndrome
Natural short sleeper (the person sleeps less hours than normal but has no ill effects)
Paradoxical insomnia (the person actually sleeps a different amount than they think they do)
Shift work sleep disorder
SLEEP-DISRUPTIVE BEHAVIORS
Abnormal behaviors during sleep are called parasomnias and are fairly common in children. They include:
The outcome varies with the type of disorder. Some disorders may clear up on their own.
When to Contact a Medical Professional
Call for an appointment with your health care provider if lack of sleep or too much sleep is interfering with daily living.
Also call if non-breathing spells are observed during sleep.
Prevention
Maintaining regular sleep habits and a quiet sleep environment may prevent some sleep disorders.
Review Date:
9/11/2008
Reviewed By:
Allen J. Blaivas, DO, Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Veteran Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, East Orange, NJ . Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.