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Browsing by Author "Shapiro, Colin M. (7102469663)"

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    Publication
    Sleep-laughing - Hypnogely
    (2013)
    Trajanovic, Nikola N. (56008805500)
    ;
    Shapiro, Colin M. (7102469663)
    ;
    Milovanovic, Srdjan (25621995600)
    Objective: To explain relatively common phenomenon of laughing during sleep and help to better define criteria for differentiating between physiological and pathological sleep-laughing. Methods: Observational study of patients who underwent a sleep assessment in a referential tertiary health facility. Results: A total of ten patients exhibited sleep laughing, nine of whom had episodes associated with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Also, in one of the patients sleep-laughing was one of the symptoms of REM sleep Behaviour Disorder, and in another patient sleep-laughing was associated with NREM sleep arousal parasomnia. Conclusion: The collected data and review of literature suggests that hypnogely in majority of the cases presents as a benign physiological phenomenon related to dreaming and REM sleep. Typically, these dreams are odd, bizarre or even unfunny for a person when awake. Nevertheless, they bring a sense of mirth and a genuine behavioural response. In a minority of cases, sleep-laughing appears to be a symptom of neurological disorders affecting the central nervous system. In these patients the behavioural substrate differs when compared to physiological laughing, and the sense of mirth is usually absent.
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    Publication
    Sleep-laughing - Hypnogely
    (2013)
    Trajanovic, Nikola N. (56008805500)
    ;
    Shapiro, Colin M. (7102469663)
    ;
    Milovanovic, Srdjan (25621995600)
    Objective: To explain relatively common phenomenon of laughing during sleep and help to better define criteria for differentiating between physiological and pathological sleep-laughing. Methods: Observational study of patients who underwent a sleep assessment in a referential tertiary health facility. Results: A total of ten patients exhibited sleep laughing, nine of whom had episodes associated with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Also, in one of the patients sleep-laughing was one of the symptoms of REM sleep Behaviour Disorder, and in another patient sleep-laughing was associated with NREM sleep arousal parasomnia. Conclusion: The collected data and review of literature suggests that hypnogely in majority of the cases presents as a benign physiological phenomenon related to dreaming and REM sleep. Typically, these dreams are odd, bizarre or even unfunny for a person when awake. Nevertheless, they bring a sense of mirth and a genuine behavioural response. In a minority of cases, sleep-laughing appears to be a symptom of neurological disorders affecting the central nervous system. In these patients the behavioural substrate differs when compared to physiological laughing, and the sense of mirth is usually absent.

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