Deccan Chronicle

SLEEPWALKE­RS FEEL NO PAIN

YOUR PET PEV

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A new study of sleepwalke­rs found an intriguing paradox: Although sleepwalke­rs have an increased risk of headaches and migraines while awake, during sleepwalki­ng, they are unlikely to feel pain even while suffering an injury.

Results show that sleepwalke­rs were nearly four times more likely to report a history of headaches (odds ratio = 3.80) and 10 times more likely to report experienci­ng migraines (OR = 10.04), after adjusting for potential confounder­s such as insomnia and depression.

Among sleepwalke­rs with at least one previous sleepwalki­ng episode that involved an injury, 79 per cent perceived no pain during the episode, allowing them to remain asleep despite hurting themselves. “Our most surprising result was the lack of pain perception during the sleepwalki­ng episodes,” said principal investigat­or Dr Regis Lopez, psychiatri­st and sleep medicine specialist at Hospital Gui-deChauliac in Montpellie­r, France.

“We report here, for the first time, an analgesia phenomenon associated with sleepwalki­ng.”

Study results are published in the November issue of the journal Sleep.

Lopez and colleagues Isabelle Jaussent, PhD, and Prof. Yves Dauvillier­s conducted the cross-sectional study of 100 healthy control subjects and 100 patients with a diagnosis of sleepwalki­ng, including 55 males and 45 females. Sleepwalke­rs had a median age of 30 years.

Daytime pain complaints were evaluated by a clinician and self-report questionna­ires, which assessed lifetime headache frequency and headache characteri­stics.

Forty-seven sleepwalke­rs reported having experience­d at least one injurious sleepwalki­ng episode. Only 10 reported waking immediatel­y due to pain; the other 37 perceived no pain during the episode, but felt pain later in the night or in the morning.

For example, one patient sustained severe fractures after jumping out of a third-floor window while sleepwalki­ng but didn’t feel the pain until after waking up later in the night. Another patient broke his leg during a sleepwalki­ng episode in which he climbed onto the roof of his house and fell down, but he didn’t wake up until morning. “Our results may help to understand the mechanisms of the sleepwalki­ng episodes,” said Lopez. “We hypothesiz­e that a dissociate state of arousal may modify the components of sleep-wake behaviour, consciousn­ess, and also pain perception.

Recent study suggests that sleepwalke­rs feel almost no pain even if they injure themselves while sleepwalki­ng

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