Somnambulizm. Obraz kliniczny i terapia

  • Konrad Janowski Wydział Nauk Społecznych, Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
  • Agnieszka Jelińska
  • Aleksander Waś
Słowa kluczowe: somnambulizm; sennowłóctwo; parasomnie; zaburzenia snu

Abstrakt

Somnambulizm (sennowłóctwo) jest nieorganicznym zaburzeniem snu o typie parasomnii, występującym u około 15% dzieci i 3% dorosłych. Klinicznie objawia się wykonywaniem podczas fazy snu non-REM złożonych czynności ruchowych (np. chodzenie, jedzenie), bez pełnego wybudzenia się ze snu oraz przy niepamięci tego wydarzenia w dniu następnym. Wiedza zarówno psychologów, jak i lekarzy na temat somnambulizmu jest najczęściej fragmentaryczna, a w praktyce klinicznej znaczenie tego zaburzenia jest zazwyczaj lekceważone. Celem niniejszego artykułu jest zatem przybliżenie psychologom i innym zainteresowanym specjalistom aktualnego stanu wiedzy na temat somnambulizmu. Artykuł prezentuje zagadnienia częstotliwości jego występowania, obrazu klinicznego, patofizjologii, kryteriów rozpoznawania, współzachorowalności, etiologii, patomechanizmów, sposobów diagnozowania i prób terapii. Przedstawiono również wynikające z dokonanego przeglądu literatury implikacje dla praktyki klinicznej i badawczej psychologów.

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2019-03-29
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