Sleepiness Information
Somnolence (or "drowsiness") is a state of near-sleep, a strong desire for sleep, or sleeping for unusually long periods (cf. hypersomnia). It has two distinct meanings, referring both to the usual state preceding falling asleep, and the chronic condition referring to being in that state independent of a circadian rhythm. The disorder characterized by the latter condition is most commonly associated with the use of prescription medications such as mirtazapine or zolpidem.
Hazards
Sleepiness can be dangerous when performing tasks that require constant concentration, such as driving a vehicle. When a person is sufficiently fatigued, he or she may experience microsleeps.
Illness
The human body can become sleepy in response to infection.[1] Such somnolence is one of several sickness behaviors or reactions to infection that some theorize evolved to promote recovery by conserving energy while the body fights the infection using fever and other means.[2][3]
Associated conditions
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This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
- advanced sleep phase syndrome
- Alice in Wonderland syndrome
- brain edema
- cerebral hypoxia
- Chronic Mental Fatigue Syndrome
- clinical depression, especially seasonal affective disorder (SAD)
- delayed sleep phase syndrome
- diabetes – ketoacidosis as example, but not balanced diabetes mellitus
- encephalitis – (viral, bacterial or other agents)
- epilepsy – after seizure
- fibromyalgia
- hydrocephalus
- hypothermia
- hypothyroidism
- infectious mononucleosis (glandular fever)
- intracranial hemorrhage such as due to ruptured aneurysm
- increased intracranial pressure; for example, due to brain tumors
- Lyme disease (borreliosis)
- medications
- analgesics – mostly prescribed or illicit opiates such as OxyContin or heroin
- anticonvulsants / antiepileptics – such as phenytoin (Dilantin), carbamazepine (Tegretol), lamotrigine (Lamictal), Lyrica (pregbalin), Gabapentin
- antidepressants – for instance, sertraline, venlafaxine and fluoxetine
- antihistamines – for instance, diphenhydramine(Benadryl) and doxylamine(Unisom-2)
- antipsychotics – for example, thioridazine, quetiapine, and olanzapine (Zyprexa) and haloperidol and Geodon.
- dopamine agonists used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease – e.g. pergolide and ropinirole and Mirapex, used to treat restless leg syndrome.
- HIV medications – for example, Sustiva and medications containing efavirenz
- hypertension medications – such as Norvasc
- tranquilizers / hypnotics – especially benzodiazepines, such as temazepam (Restoril) or nitrazepam (Mogadon), and barbiturates, such as amobarbital (Amytal) or secobarbital (Seconal)
- other agents impacting the central nervous system, in sufficient or toxic doses
- narcolepsy
- sickness behavior
- sleep apnea
- sleep deprivation / insomnia
- starvation
- stroke
- traumatic brain injury
- trypanosomiasis
See also
References
- ^ Mullington, J.; Korth, C.; Hermann, D.M.; Orth, A.; Galanos, C.; Holsboer, F.; Pollmacher, T. (2000) "Dose-dependent effects of endotoxin on human sleep". Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 278: R947–955 PubMed
- ^ Hart, B.L. (1988) "Biological basis of the behavior of sick animals". Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 12: 123–137. PubMed
- ^ Kelley, K.W.; Bluthe, R.M.; Dantzer, R.; Zhou, J.H.; Shen, W.H.; Johnson, R.W.; Broussard, S.R. (2003) "Cytokine-induced sickness behavior". Brain Behav Immun. 17 Suppl 1: S112–118 PubMed
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Symptoms and signs: cognition, perception, emotional state and behaviour (R40–R46, 780.0–780.5, 781.1) |
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Anxiety · Irritability · Hostility · Suicidal ideation
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| Behavior |
Verbosity
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| Perception/
sensation
disorder |
Olfaction : Anosmia · Hyposmia · Dysosmia · Parosmia · Hyperosmia
Taste: Ageusia · Hypogeusia · Dysgeusia · Parageusia · Hypergeusia
Hallucination: Auditory hallucination
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Psychophysiology: Sleep and sleep disorders (F51 and G47, 307.4 and 327) |
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| Sleep stages |
Rapid eye movement sleep · Non-rapid eye movement sleep · Slow-wave sleep
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| Brain waves |
Alpha wave · Beta wave · Gamma wave · Delta wave · Theta rhythm · K-complex · Sleep spindle · Sensorimotor rhythm · Mu rhythm
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| Sleep
disorders |
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| Benign
phenomena |
Dream · Exploding head syndrome · False awakening · Hypnagogia · Hypnic jerk · Lucid dream · Nightmare · Nocturnal emission · Nocturnal penile tumescence · Sleep paralysis · Somnolence
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topics |
Bed (Bunk bed, Four poster bed, Futon, Daybed, Hammock, Mattress, Sleeping bag) · Bed bug · Bedding · Bedroom · Bedtime · Bedtime toy · Bedtime story · Caffeine nap · Chronotype · Dream journal · Hypnopompic state · Lullaby · Methods of falling asleep · Microsleep · Nap · Nightwear · Polyphasic sleep · Polysomnography · Power nap · Second wind · Siesta · Sleep and creativity · Sleep and learning · Sleep debt · Sleep deprivation · Sleep diary · Sleep inertia · Sleep medicine · Sleeping while on duty · Sleepover · Snoring · Excessive daytime sleepiness · ("Sleeping sickness", which is not a sleep disorder.)
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Categories: Symptoms and signs: Cognition, perception, emotional state and behaviour | Sleep |
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