Is there a dissociative process in sleepwalking and night terrors?
D Hartman, A H Crisp, P Sedgwick, S Borrow
Department of
Psychiatry, St George's Hospital Medical School, London, and South
West London and St George's Mental Health NHS Trust, Sleep Laboratory,
Atkinson Morley's Hospital, London, UK
Correspondence to: Professor A H Crisp, Psychiatric Research Unit, Atkinson Morley's Hospital, Wimbledon, London SW20 0NE, UK a.crisp{at}sghms.ac.uk
Submitted 10 April
2000;
Accepted 15 August 2000
The enduring and contentious hypothesis that sleepwalking
and night terrors are symptomatic of a protective dissociative
mechanism is examined. This is mobilised when intolerable impulses,
feelings and memories escape, within sleep, the diminished control of
mental defence mechanisms. They then erupt but in a limited motoric or affective form with restricted awareness and subsequent amnesia for the
event. It has also been suggested that such processes are more likely
when the patient has a history of major psychological trauma. In a
group of 22 adult patients, referred to a tertiary sleep disorders
service with possible sleepwalking/night terrors, diagnosis was
confirmed both clinically and polysomnographically, and only six
patients had a history of such trauma. More commonly these described
sleepwalking/night terrors are associated with vivid dream-like
experiences or behaviour related to flight from attack. Two such cases,
suggestive of a dissociative process, are described in more detail.
The results of this study are presented largely on account of the
negative findings. Scores on the dissociation questionnaire (DIS-Q)
were normal, although generally higher in the small "trauma" subgroup. These were similar to scores characterising individuals with
post-traumatic stress disorder. This "trauma" group also scored
particularly highly on the anxiety,
phobic, and
depression scales of the Crown-Crisp
experiential index. In contrast the "no trauma" group scored more
specifically highly on the anxiety scale,
along with major trends to high depression
and hysteria scale scores. Two cases are
presented which illustrate exceptional occurrence of later onset of
sleepwalking/night terrors with accompanying post-traumatic symptoms
during wakefulness. It is concluded that a history of major
psychological trauma exists in only a minority of adult patients
presenting with sleepwalking/night terror syndrome. In this subgroup
trauma appears to dictate the subsequent content of the attacks.
However, the symptoms express themselves within the form of the
sleepwalking/night terror syndrome rather than as rapid eye movement
sleep related nightmares. The main group of subjects with the syndrome
and with no history of major psychological trauma show no clinical or
DIS-Q evidence of dissociation during wakefulness. The proposition
that, within the character structure of this group, the mechanism still
operates but exclusively within sleep remains a possibility.
Keywords: sleepwalking; night terrors; dissociation; post-traumatic stress disorder
© 2001 by The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine
This article has been cited by other articles:
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Pillmann, F.
(2009). Complex Dream-Enacting Behavior in Sleepwalking. Psychosom. Med.
71: 231-234
[Abstract] [Full Text] -
Cartwright, R.
(2004). Sleepwalking Violence: A Sleep Disorder, a Legal Dilemma, and a Psychological Challenge. Am. J. Psychiatry
161: 1149-1158
[Abstract] [Full Text]
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