Sleep drunkenness affects 1 in 7 Americans

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Sunday, August 23, 2015
Sleep drunkenness affects 1 in 7 Americans
When it comes to sleep, Americans are suffering. In fact, about 70 million of us have a chronic sleep problem. Now there's a new condition that you may not have heard of.

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- When it comes to sleep, Americans are suffering. In fact, about 70 million of us have a chronic sleep problem. Now there's a new condition that you may not have heard of.

Most of us need a few minutes to get going. Maurice M. Ohayon, MD, DSc, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Director of the Stanford Sleep Epidemiology Research Centre School of Medicine says if you wake up very confused and out of sorts, you could suffer from "sleep drunkenness."

Ohayon told ABC30, "Sleep drunkenness is in fact mental confusion that is occurring when the subject is awakened from the deep phase of sleep."

Ohayon studied more than 19,000 adults and found sleep drunkenness affects about one in seven Americans. 84 percent of people who had the disorder had other sleep problems, a mental health condition or used antidepressants. In severe cases, patients can injure themselves or others.

Ohayon told ABC30, "The subject can have a violent answer to the people around him."

People who are sleep-deprived or those who over-sleep are most likely to suffer from sleep drunkenness. It can happen after a long snooze or a short nap. Ohayon says it often takes several minutes or more for symptoms to go away.

"They must know that they should give five minutes minimally to the people to recuperate from the nap," Ohayon told ABC30.

Also treating other sleep problems can help sleep drunkenness. Make sure you talk to a doctor so you can wake up clear-minded and ready to go.

About one-third of patients with sleep drunkenness have symptoms for more than 15 minutes. Most of the time, they can't remember the incidences afterwards, but sleep drunkenness can be dangerous. Ohayon says in an extreme case, the condition caused a man on a ship to fall to his death.

For more information, contact:

Maurice M. Ohayon, MD, DSc, PhD
Behavioral Sciences Director
Stanford Sleep Epidemiology Research Centre School of Medicine
Stanford University
3430 West Bayshore Road
Palo Alto, CA 94303
650-494-1137 ext. 2
mohayon@stanford.edu