Hoag Sleep Center Newport Beach
510 Superior, Suite 200A, Newport Beach, CA 92663
949-764-8070
Trouble falling asleep or staying asleep plagues one in three American adults. If you suffer from insomnia, it disturbs your waking hours as well as your sleeping hours, since you’re likely to feel sleepy during the day and have trouble concentrating on tasks after a poor night’s sleep. In this case, insomnia treatment may be an option.
Narcolepsy can be defined as episodes of excessive drowsiness during the day with a tendency to sleep at inappropriate times. Highly stressful situations sometimes bring on the sleep episodes of narcolepsy and are not completely relieved by an amount of sleep. If you are experiencing these episodes, narcolepsy treatment may be an option. Like insomnia treatment, narcolepsy can be treated by maintaining good sleeping habits.
Although narcolepsy is a fairly uncommon condition, its impact on a person’s life can be serious and if not recognized and appropriately managed, disabling. A cure for narcolepsy has not yet been found, but most people with this disorder can lead nearly normal lives if the condition is properly treated.
Loud snoring can be a sign that something is seriously wrong with your breathing during sleep. Snoring indicates that the airway is not fully open, and the distinctive sound of snoring comes from efforts to force air through the narrowed passageway. Sleep can become a time of increased health risk.
An estimated 10-30 percent of adults snore. For the majority of them, snoring has no serious medical consequences. For 5 percent — particularly overweight and middle-aged men — extremely loud nightly snoring is an indication of a potentially life-threatening disorder called Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome (OSA).
A disorder that affects the limbs and affects a person’s ability to sleep at night and function normally during the day is Periodic Limb Movement Disorder (PLMD). While the leg movements of Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) are a voluntary response to ease the uncomfortable feelings in the limbs when a person is awake, the movements of PLMD occur most often when a person is asleep and are involuntary. People with PLMD are often not aware of these movements, although they may occasionally notice the involuntary movements of PLMD while they are awake. Bed partners can notice the leg movements, often by a slight jerking of the mattress or bed. Most people with RLS have PLMD, but patients with PLMD often do not have RLS.
The paralysis that normally occurs during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is incomplete or absent in patients with REM Sleep Behavior Disorder (RBD), allowing the person to “act out” his or her dreams and make abnormal vocal sounds while sleeping. RBD is characterized by the acting out of dreams that are vivid, intense, and violent. Dream-enacting behaviors include sleep talking, yelling, punching, kicking, sitting, jumping from bed, arm flailing, and grabbing.
During sleep, the patient appears to act out the content of whatever she or he is dreaming. Normally, the body loses muscle tone during dream (REM) sleep, preventing most of us from physically reacting to our dreams. For reasons that are not yet understood, some patients do not lose muscle power during dream sleep, and thus begin to move about as their dream content dictates. The danger to the patient and bed partner is that these movements can cause injury.
Circadian rhythm refers to the body’s internal clock, which regulates the natural cycle of sleep and wakefulness over a 24-hour period. When this rhythm is disrupted, it can lead to difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or feeling rested at the right times of day. People with circadian rhythm disorders may find themselves wide awake late into the night, waking too early, or struggling with excessive sleepiness during the day.
Potential causes include irregular sleep schedules, frequent travel across time zones, shift work, or underlying medical and mental health conditions that interfere with the body’s natural timing. In some cases, the brain’s internal clock does not align with external cues like light and darkness, leading to ongoing challenges with sleep.
Diagnosis typically involves a thorough evaluation of sleep history, daily routines, and symptom patterns. Keeping a sleep diary or undergoing sleep testing may help identify whether disrupted circadian rhythms are contributing to sleep problems.
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