Forensic Sleep Medicine

Author(s):  
Kenneth J. Weiss ◽  
Clarence Watson ◽  
Mark R. Pressman

Patients with sleep disorders can exhibit behavior that includes violent acts. The behavior may occur during various sleep stages, ranges in complexity, and requires an analysis of consciousness. When the behavior harms another person and criminal charges follow, expert testimony will be required to explain the physiology of the disorder and impairments in consciousness that determine criminal culpability, that is, whether there was conscious intent behind the behavior. In this chapter, sleep-related conditions associated with violent behavior are discussed, along with guidelines for presenting scientific testimony in court. These disorders include rapid eye movement (REM) behavior disorder, somnambulism and other non-REM partial awakenings, and hypersomnolence. Feigned symptoms and malingering must be ruled out, and the clinical parameters for them are discussed. While the physiology of sleep disorders has widely been known, admissibility in court is not automatic. Standards for acceptable expert testimony are discussed.

SLEEP ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 43 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A390-A390
Author(s):  
Y Chen ◽  
C Chen ◽  
P J Strollo ◽  
C Li ◽  
W Ko ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Sleep disturbance is a prevalent problem among HIV-infected persons. The recognition of comorbid sleep disorders in patients with HIV is currently hampered by limited knowledge of sleep-related symptoms, sleep architecture, and types of sleep disorders. We aimed to compare the differences in sleep-related symptoms and polysomnography-based sleep disorders between HIV-infected persons and controls. Methods The study included 170 men with a Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) greater than 5, composed of 44 HIV-infected men and 126 male controls who were frequency-matched by sex, age (-/+ 3.0 years) and BMI (-/+ 3.0 kg/m2). For all participants an overnight sleep study using a Somte V1 monitor was conducted. Differences in sleep-related symptoms and sleep disorders between HIV-infected patients and controls were examined using t-tests or Chi-square tests. Results HIV-infected persons with sleep disturbances more often had psychological disturbances (72.7% vs. 40.5%, p<0.001) and suspected rapid eye movement (REM) behavior disorder (RBD) (25.0% vs. 4.8%, p<0.01) than that of controls. The sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) in HIV-infected persons was less common than that in controls (56.8% vs. 87.3%, p<0.001). The mean percentage of REM sleep among HIV-infected patients was higher than that among the controls (20.6% vs. 16.6%, p<0.001). Enuresis was more common in HIV-infected persons than controls (40.9% vs. 22.2%, p=0.02). Conclusion Psychological disturbances and SDB can be the possible explanations of sleep disturbances in HIV-infected persons, in which suspected RBD is notable. Further studies are warranted to examine underlying factors of suspected RBD among HIV-infected persons with sleep disturbances. Support This work was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Executive Yuan of Taiwan [MOST 105-3011-E-006-002], and National Cheng Kung University Hospital [NCKUH-10702022]


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Penzel ◽  
Ingo Fietze

Sleep presents a third of human life and a healthy and restorative sleep is indispensable for a good performance during daytime. Human functions follow circadian rhythms and follow the need to relax and recover from daytime stressors. According to human senses and abilities this relaxation and recovery period is concentrated on nighttime. Sleep is shutting off senses and follow a dedicated program for recovery with light sleep, deep sleep and rapid eye movement sleep with different functions linked to these sleep phases and with different consequences for the physical and mental functions. Unfortunately in patients with sleep disorders this recovery program is disturbed. In order to identify reasons and in order to explore physical and mental problems related to this, sleep studies had been developed and are conducted in sleep medicine centers. Sleep medicine centers perform a cardiorespiratory polysomnography. During cardiorespiratory polysomnography brain functions and sleep stages are quantifed through assessing electroencephalography (EEG), electrooculography (EOG), electromyography (EMG) on the head and on the legs, electrocardiography (ECG), respiratory airflow, respiratory effort, oxygen concentration (SaO2), body position, and body movements. Because going to bed to find sleep is a behavioral action as well, we record video and sound in addition. This is done under laboratory conditions in a controlled and supervised setting, called sleep medicine center. Sleep disorders can be identified and are classified into six categories: insomnia, hypersomnia of central origin, sleep related breathing disorders, sleep related movement disorders, sleep-wake rhythm disorders, and parasomnias. In addition secondary sleep disorders due to medical or mental problems or due to substances or drugs are known as well. Due to the high prevalence of sleep disorders and sleep complaints there is an urgent need to develop and introduce simplified tools to identify sleep problems. For some sleep disorders protable recorder systems were developed. This is the case for sleep disordered breathing. For insomnia problems and sleep-wake rhythm disorders actigraphy systems are used. Only based on the recording of movement and motion using statistical analysis it is possible to distinguish sleep and wake with a good accuracy and reliability. This method is used to study sleep duration as well as sleep fragmentation to some extent. A study on sleep duration and impaired sleep in ballet dancers over a period of 60 days prior to a major premiere event is presented.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Penzel ◽  
Ingo Fietze

Sleep presents a third of human life and a healthy and restorative sleep is indispensable for a good performance during daytime. Human functions follow circadian rhythms and follow the need to relax and recover from daytime stressors. According to human senses and abilities this relaxation and recovery period is concentrated on nighttime. Sleep is shutting off senses and follow a dedicated program for recovery with light sleep, deep sleep and rapid eye movement sleep with different functions linked to these sleep phases and with different consequences for the physical and mental functions. Unfortunately in patients with sleep disorders this recovery program is disturbed. In order to identify reasons and in order to explore physical and mental problems related to this, sleep studies had been developed and are conducted in sleep medicine centers. Sleep medicine centers perform a cardiorespiratory polysomnography. During cardiorespiratory polysomnography brain functions and sleep stages are quantifed through assessing electroencephalography (EEG), electrooculography (EOG), electromyography (EMG) on the head and on the legs, electrocardiography (ECG), respiratory airflow, respiratory effort, oxygen concentration (SaO2), body position, and body movements. Because going to bed to find sleep is a behavioral action as well, we record video and sound in addition. This is done under laboratory conditions in a controlled and supervised setting, called sleep medicine center. Sleep disorders can be identified and are classified into six categories: insomnia, hypersomnia of central origin, sleep related breathing disorders, sleep related movement disorders, sleep-wake rhythm disorders, and parasomnias. In addition secondary sleep disorders due to medical or mental problems or due to substances or drugs are known as well. Due to the high prevalence of sleep disorders and sleep complaints there is an urgent need to develop and introduce simplified tools to identify sleep problems. For some sleep disorders protable recorder systems were developed. This is the case for sleep disordered breathing. For insomnia problems and sleep-wake rhythm disorders actigraphy systems are used. Only based on the recording of movement and motion using statistical analysis it is possible to distinguish sleep and wake with a good accuracy and reliability. This method is used to study sleep duration as well as sleep fragmentation to some extent. A study on sleep duration and impaired sleep in ballet dancers over a period of 60 days prior to a major premiere event is presented.


2011 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 945-970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Wolf-Meyer

In April of 2004, only a few months into my fieldwork, I was struck by the level and variety of doubt expressed by the physicians at the Midwest Sleep Disorder Center (MSDC). The MSDC is a group of physicians recognized in the field as experts in many areas of sleep medicine, especially parasomnias—such as sleepwalking, sleep-related eating, and REM behavior disorder. Dr. Richards, the clinic's senior researcher and a neurologist by training, began the weekly departmental rounds. Generally, these consisted of case studies presented by the assembled clinicians and fellows, but at times rounds wandered into more philosophical discussions or ribald joking. On this day, Dr. Richards asked Dr. Pym if he had seen any patients of note. Pym was trained as a pediatrician, and his patients, at both the MSDC and the neighboring Children's Hospital, were mostly adolescents and young children. Pym had been in Nicaragua for the previous three weeks as part of a volunteer program to provide medical aid to the rural poor, and so had no cases, but he took the opportunity to make some observations on sleep disorders in Central America. He remarked that most of the places he had been to had about eleven hours of night and thirteen of daylight, and with only intermittent electrical lighting in the evening, most people went to bed at nightfall and arose with the sun. As a result, he postulated, most of the sleep disorders that physicians dealt with in the United States were not found there. He went on to blame electric lighting for many of the sleep problems in the United States—including insomnia and advanced and delayed sleep phase disorders—since it negatively affected biological impulses to sleep. Pym claimed that sleep disorders were “rare” in Nicaragua. He said most children there slept with their parents, who attended to their sleep problems as they happened, and so they did not develop into more acute pathological forms. This led into a broader conversation about light and its effects on human sleep patterns, in which some of the discussion revolved around sleeplessness in intensive care units; apparently, Richards reported, many people never entered REM sleep while in the units due to lighting disruptions, which, he said, might account for “ICU psychosis,” as people hallucinated due to sleepiness. At this point, Dr. Blake, a young pediatrician, remarked in relation to the newness of sleep medicine, “We're all flying by the seats of our pants,” to which Richards said, “We don't know anything.”


Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 1380
Author(s):  
Manish Sharma ◽  
Virendra Patel ◽  
Jainendra Tiwari ◽  
U. Rajendra Acharya

Sleep is highly essential for maintaining metabolism of the body and mental balance for increased productivity and concentration. Often, sleep is analyzed using macrostructure sleep stages which alone cannot provide information about the functional structure and stability of sleep. The cyclic alternating pattern (CAP) is a physiological recurring electroencephalogram (EEG) activity occurring in the brain during sleep and captures microstructure of the sleep and can be used to identify sleep instability. The CAP can also be associated with various sleep-related pathologies, and can be useful in identifying various sleep disorders. Conventionally, sleep is analyzed using polysomnogram (PSG) in various sleep laboratories by trained physicians and medical practitioners. However, PSG-based manual sleep analysis by trained medical practitioners is onerous, tedious and unfavourable for patients. Hence, a computerized, simple and patient convenient system is highly desirable for monitoring and analysis of sleep. In this study, we have proposed a system for automated identification of CAP phase-A and phase-B. To accomplish the task, we have utilized the openly accessible CAP sleep database. The study is performed using two single-channel EEG modalities and their combination. The model is developed using EEG signals of healthy subjects as well as patients suffering from six different sleep disorders namely nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (NFLE), sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), narcolepsy, periodic leg movement disorder (PLM), insomnia and rapid eye movement behavior disorder (RBD) subjects. An optimal orthogonal wavelet filter bank is used to perform the wavelet decomposition and subsequently, entropy and Hjorth parameters are extracted from the decomposed coefficients. The extracted features have been applied to different machine learning algorithms. The best performance is obtained using ensemble of bagged tress (EBagT) classifier. The proposed method has obtained the average classification accuracy of 84%, 83%, 81%, 78%, 77%, 76% and 72% for NFLE, healthy, SDB, narcolepsy, PLM, insomnia and RBD subjects, respectively in discriminating phases A and B using a balanced database. Our developed model yielded an average accuracy of 78% when all 77 subjects including healthy and sleep disordered patients are considered. Our proposed system can assist the sleep specialists in an automated and efficient analysis of sleep using sleep microstructure.


2020 ◽  
Vol 78 (10) ◽  
pp. 601-602
Author(s):  
Dalva POYARES ◽  
Ronaldo Delmonte PIOVEZAN

Sleep is one of the key underpinnings of human health, yet sleep disturbances and impaired sleep are rampant in modern life. Healthy sleep is a whole-body process impacted by circadian rhythm, daily activities, and emotional well-being, among others. When properly aligned, these work in concert to produce restorative and refreshing sleep. When not in balance, however, sleep disorders result. Yet too often, the approach to treatment of sleep disorders is compartmentalized, failing to recognize all of the complex interactions that are involved. This text offers a comprehensive approach to sleep and sleep disorders by delineating the many factors that interplay into healthy sleep. Health care providers can learn how to better manage their patients with sleep disorders by integrating complementary and conventional approaches. Using an evidence-based approach throughout, this book describes the basics of normal sleep then delves into the foundations of integrative sleep medicine, including the circadian rhythm, mind/body-sleep connection, light, dreaming, the gastrointestinal system, and botanicals/supplements. Specific sleep issues and disorders are then addressed from an integrative perspective, including insomnia, obstructive sleep apnea, sleep related movement disorders, and parasomnias.


2009 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo Sérgio Azeredo Henriques Filho ◽  
Riccardo Pratesi

BACKGROUND: Attention deficit may be related to sleep disorders in Chiari malformation type II (CMII). Our aim is identify sleep disorders and their specific contribution in attention deficit. METHOD: We selected 24 patients with CM II and 24 without CM II. DSM-IV criteria and a neuropsychological analysis were applied in all. All patients underwent full night polysomnography. RESULTS: 14 CM II patients presented sleep apnea syndrome, REM sleep behavior disorder and periodic limb movement in sleep; six patients without CM II presented sleep apnea syndrome. Among these patients, 12 (six with CM II and six without CM II) presented attention deficit related to the sleep disorders. CONCLUSION: Sleep disorders may impair cognitive functions, as attention, and contribute to poor quality of learning also in patients with CM II.


Neurology ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 502-505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liborio Parrino ◽  
Giovanni Pavesi

Sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy (SHE) is characterized by short-lasting seizures patterned by repetitive and stereotyped motor events in the same person. In autosomal dominant SHE, genetic factors play a well-known key role. In The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, Charles Darwin quotes a plausible example of SHE illustrated by his cousin Sir Francis Galton: “the gentleman…lay fast asleep on his back in bed, raising his right arm slowly in front of his face, up to his forehead, and then dropping it with a jerk, so that the wrist fell heavily on the bridge of his nose. The trick did not occur every night, but occasionally, and was independent of any ascertained cause. Sometimes it was repeated incessantly for an hour or more.” Similar manifestations during sleep occurred also in the patient's son and granddaughter, suggesting an autosomal inheritance without sex relationship. Differential diagnosis with REM behavior disorder and other parasomnias is discussed. To our knowledge, this could be the first description of a stereotyped SHE pattern with genetic transmission.


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