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Iranian Journal of Psychiatry. 2011; 6 (2): 75-78
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-124415

ABSTRACT

Parasomnias can create sleep disruption; in this article we assessed parasomnias in school-aged children in Tehran. In spring 2005, a total of 6000 sleep questionnaires were distributed to school-aged children in 5 districts of Tehran [Iran]. A modified Pediatrics sleep questionnaire with 34 questions was used. Parasomnias varied from 0.5% to 5.7% among the subjects as follows: 2.7% sleep talking, 0.5% sleepwalking, 5.7% bruxism, 2.3% enuresis, and nightmare 4%. A group of children showed parasomnias occasionally- this was 13.1% for sleep talking, 1.4% for sleepwalking, 10.6% for bruxism, 3.1% for enuresis and 18.4% for nightmares. A high proportion of children starting school suffer from sleep problems. In many cases this is a temporary, developmentally related phenomenon, but in 6% of the children the disorder is more serious and may be connected with various stress factors and further behavioral disturbances


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Prevalence , Schools , Child , Surveys and Questionnaires , Sleep-Wake Transition Disorders , Somnambulism , Bruxism , Enuresis , Dreams , Social Class
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