Journal article
A systematic review of treatments for sleepwalking: 100 years of case studies
Sleep and Hypnosis, Vol.19(2), pp.21-29
2017
Abstract
While generally harmless, sleepwalking can result in injury to the sleepwalker and/or others, prompting help-seeking. This is the frst study to systematically review the scientifc evidence underpinning treatments for sleepwalking. A literature search of CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, PubMed, and ScienceDirect was conducted with the keywords 'sleepwalking' OR 'somnambulism', current to 29 February 2016. Studies were included if they reported on any intervention for sleepwalking. Of the original 53 sourced papers, 44 met the inclusion criteria and were subsequently included for review. None had a methodology that could demonstrate efcacy or effectiveness. Case and case series reports dominate the literature with patients treated with a range of psychological, pharmacological and other interventions. While the results of this review highlight potential treatments, well-designed randomized control trials of theoretically supported interventions that include assessment of adverse effects are urgently needed. Psychological interventions-scheduled waking and hypnosis-are potential frst line interventions for evaluation, especially with children, as they are theoretically grounded, case studies suggest they may be effective, and they do not have the side-effects of pharmacological interventions.
Details
- Title
- A systematic review of treatments for sleepwalking: 100 years of case studies
- Authors
- Helen M Stallman (Author) - University of South AustraliaM Kohler (Author) - University of South Australia
- Publication details
- Sleep and Hypnosis, Vol.19(2), pp.21-29
- Publisher
- Yerkure Tanitim ve Yayincilik Hizmetleri A.S.
- Date published
- 2017
- DOI
- 10.5350/Sleep.Hypn.2016.18.0118
- ISSN
- 1302-1192
- Organisation Unit
- School of Social Sciences - Legacy; University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland; School of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Legacy
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99450609702621
- Output Type
- Journal article
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